Y’all can call me Bunny, I’m soon to be 16 and love music. I follow just Enha, Cortis and Lngshot and my biases are Jungwon, Martin and Louis.
I speak 🇮🇹🇬🇧🇪🇸🇨🇳
This account is for cortis and I think I’ll write about Martin the most, my wreckers are Keonho and James. As for Martin you’ll often see him referred as Mars. It’s my personal nickname for him since Tin sounds too much like Can in Chinese (like cola can)
I hope y’all won’t mind me talking about my daily life too sometimes.
I just got a few small rules, I’d like if you follow them.
🎨I won’t write about ANY sexual trope that involves the members and the main characters. The further I go is with make out sessions. But I can still sometimes mention sex in my angst but nothing about the act will be described. And, when mentioned, the characters have to be the same age 16-16 minimum (cuz damn we know some of us have sex at that age (lately it happens even earlier))
🎨I will often use OCs, if you don’t like how they are made, tell me. I can see if I made them do something actually disrespectful or if I described their illnesses incorrectly. I always try to do research when diagnosing something to my characters but I can still make mistakes.
🎨please, do not copy or translate my work, if you really want to translate, ask first.
🎨english is not my first language so there might be some grammar errors, typos etc. but please be indulgent.
🎨comments, likes and reposts are appreciated, just don’t spam please. I simply don’t want my phone to get blown up with notifications.
🎨I may talk about depression, struggles with self harm, or even drugs sometimes, but this is not associated with the real person. I just love giving my OCs trauma.
synopsis: martin does nothing but pass notes in class to cure his boredom, soon one day he believes he has found his longtime pen pal. or the one where martin is down bad…
genre: fake texts, one shot au, non!idols, student au, fluff
Okay so basicallyyyyy I was searching some cute Lngshot fic and was mostly all Ohyul smut what the heck but then I wanted to search my bias AND WHAT THE HELL THERES LOUIS SMUT TOO AND IM SO FUCKING DISGUSTED CAUSE GUYS WERE THE SAME AGE and, as a girl I hate being sexualized (mostly by old ass men in the streets) but also seeing a pure boy like him in this tropes? And istg I saw one that incuded somnophilia. I literally feel the same with cortis maknae line
summary; what’s it like dating louis (teenage love) learning about love & relationships ﹒⭒﹒⭒﹒⭒ requested
warnings; fluff, mostly focused on his serious outlook on your relationship and his will and wish to grow with you
⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘ ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘
- louis is the type of bf who makes love feel exactly the way it should as a teenager. late night calls that start with ‘i just want to see your face real quick’ but turn into two hours, sharing earphones, fighting over your snacks, sitting next to each other doom scrolling but still feeling the butterflies of being in each other’s presence. the innocence and excitement of being with each other, the feeling of love and affection in new ways that you never got to experience before. the joy of getting to know what love is actually like and what it means to be loved by someone
- louis is the type of bf who’s into playful affection. he’ll bump your shoulder while passing by, poke your cheeks, give you piggyback rides so you get to experience the world from his perspective (giant bf things) but he’s also very gentle and sweet in certain situations, he likes to hold your hand while walking or share his drink and food with you, feeding you off of his spoon or helping you tie your shoelaces. it’s sweet and soft, and he’s getting more and more comfortable with it as the time goes by. his shyness replaced by confidence and comfort
- louis is the type of bf who might tease you all the time; mimicking your laugh, giggle whenever you mispronounce french words he’s teaching you, putting up a high pitched voice when he imitates you and mirror your sighs but the second he sees a switch in your face, even the slightest bit, all the jokes disappear and he turns very serious. asking you if you’re ok and making sure he didn’t go too far in his teasing. and ofc he’ll do anything to bring your smile back in that very moment
- louis is the type of bf who believes in growing together. you’re his first love and he’s taking it very seriously. even tho he’s so young and he’s learning about the value of love and relationships every day, he’s certain to do it the right way first time around. he supports your dreams, encourages you to level up your own goals and happiness just like you do to him. he won’t ever hold you back but instead cheers you on all the time. he understands that growth in a relationship doesn’t just mean growing together, but also separate as two individuals (one of his older members must have spoken some wisdom in his brain)
- louis is the type of bf who still gets shy whenever his members or other people are around. he’s not ashamed of you, not at all, if anything he’s too in love and in awe of you to control himself. he’ll blush and hide his face in his hand whenever one of the guys whistles or says something about you two. he can’t help it, but that won’t stop him from reaching for your hand (especially for moral support)
- louis is the type of bf who doesn’t do fancy / official dates. some might say it’s the age and the ‘teenage love’ that doesn’t have the money or effort to do actual dates but that’s not the case at all. for him, dates are about spending time together, making memories and having fun. why would he sit in a fancy restaurant with you when you could quite literally go to an arcade and get burgers afterwards?? convenient store snacks and walking around the city / park without any destination? sign him up!! sitting on a bench with icecream, watching the sun set while talking about your childhood memories? yes please! he loves it. those moments feel so much more special than any restaurant
- louis is the type of bf who’s goofy with you. he always sends you voice notes (voice cracks included) about literally anything, writes silly songs about your inside jokes, has a funny picture of you as his lockscreen, hides your charger or even adds salt to your drink just to see your reaction. he likes to play around but it’s never harmful, it’s just one of his ways to express his ‘love’ and affection
- louis is the type of bf who’s your bf and best friend at the same time. he’s a silly guy with teenage boy with teenage humor and that’s what makes you fall in love more and more. you’ve got the comfort and warmth of a person who makes you laugh until your stomach hurts, who comforts you whenever needed and who loves you for more than anything. at the same time you’ve got a buddy who’s down for prank wars and pulling jokes on his members all the time as well. it’s perfect
- louis is the type of bf who’s surprisingly mature for his age but nonetheless he is still new to this whole thing of dating. he messes up sometimes, both of you do actually. small arguments about nothing, misunderstandings and awkward apologies. it’s a process of learning and understanding and it goes paired with ups and downs. he’s learning how to say sorry properly, how to listen and how to express himself in new situations but he doesn’t let those things knock him down. he improves and learns along the way
- louis is the type of bf who sometimes struggles with balance and time. practices run late, inspiration hitting at the most ungodly hours which results in all nighters in the studio, phone on dnd, texts being left unanswered for hours. he gets fully immersed in his work and forgets about the rest of the world (you) and when he’s finally off work, he’s exhausted and sore. it’s hard for him to include you in his routine whenever it comes to stuff like this, but you can tell he’s trying. he appreciates whenever you voice out your thoughts so he can work on it. and he shows that he listens; sending you quick check in texts when he’s having another studio night. even a small; ‘sleep well’ shows that he thought of you and doesn’t let you in the dark (unintentionally)
- louis is the type of bf who learns from his older members; monkey sees monkey does. just-because flowers (he saw ohyul buying flowers for his gf once), leaving small notes (he saw ryul doing the same) and even stacking up on your fav snacks when he knows you’re coming over (the fridge is always full with woojin’s gfs fav foods with movie nights) he picks up bits and pieces and decides to try it all out. he loves seeing your reactions whenever he does something like this, it encourages him and it makes him feel so warm and happy inside when he sees that it makes you blush and feel loved
- louis is the type of bf who feels an insane amount of pride and love whenever he thinks of you (and him together) he’s not always sure what it means and why he’s feeling certain things but he’s sure about the fact that he likes it. he likes the way you make him feel literal butterflies in his stomach or the way you make him smile just by looking into your eyes. he might be new to love but if this is what it feels like; he never wants it to stop or change
- louis is the type of bf who loves the way his and your commitment to each other gets stronger and stronger every passing day. not fast, not perfect, but in your own way. small adjustments to the other, new habits, new priorities, deeper understandings. he doesn’t want to grow up too fast, his work already being fast paced, so he likes how you have your own little world to share; not everything is stable and set, but it all feels possible and full of promises. you’re each other’s safe place in the world of chaos and youth. and everyday he thinks to himself; yes this is my person while i’m becoming who i want to be
warnings: none just fluff, soft hours, idol life mentions, excessive cuteness.
authors note ⭑ this was supposed to be short and then i blacked out and suddenly it was 3am and i was emotionally attached. this is very soft, very comfort-coded, and very much written for anyone who just wants to imagine a quiet facetime call that feels safe. ♡
Kwon Ohyul - 권오율
You’re lying on your stomach, one leg bent, scrolling through nothing in particular when your phone buzzes. FaceTime request from Ohyul.
You smile before you even answer it.
When his face fills the screen, he’s lying back against his pillow, hoodie half zipped, hair messy and his phone angled slightly above him.
"There you are." he says, like he was waiting.
"You called me." you reply, teasing.
He shrugs, a lazy little smile playing on his lips. "So what."
You prop your phone up and rest your chin on your hand. "What are you doing?"
"Nothing," he answers immediately. "Just wanted to see you."
You roll your eyes but you’re smiling. "You’re clingy."
"Oh absolutely," he says, unbothered. "So shawty just hit me with the FaceTime. I think about you every night time."
You laugh, because of course he’d quote his own song like that, completely serious about it too.
"I do." he adds, softer now. "Think about you, I mean."
There’s a pause. Not awkward but comfortable. The kind where you can hear him breathing on the other end.
"You look tired." you say.
"Practice ran late." he replies. "But this helps."
"Me?"
"Yeah, seeing you. Makes my brain calm down."
You shift closer to the screen without realizing it. "You’re so dramatic."
"And you love it."
He watches you for a moment, like he’s memorizing your face. "Promise me something?"
"What?"
"Don’t hang up first."
You smile. "Fine."
"Good," he says, settling in. "Then stay with me until I fall asleep."
Kim Ryul - 김률
Ryul answers FaceTime with his camera already on, phone resting against the desk, his face framed perfectly like he planned it. He’s wearing a plain tee, hair neat, eyes warm when he sees you.
"Hey." he says, voice gentle.
"Hi," you reply, instantly softer.
He tilts his head. "You ate?"
"Yes, mom."
He chuckles. "I’m serious."
"I did." you reassure him. "Did you?"
"Not yet," he admits. "I wanted to talk to you first."
You shake your head. "You’re unbelievable."
He smiles at that. The kind of smile that makes your chest feel warm. "I was thinking, my love…"
You blink. "What?"
He repeats it slower, like he wants you to really hear it. "I was thinking about us. Slowly. Like, not rushing anything."
You sit up a little straighter. Confused. "You’re already my boyfriend, Ryul."
"I know," he says. "I just mean… I like how calm it feels with you."
There’s something steady about him. The way he looks at you like you’re not just exciting, but important.
"You know," he continues, rubbing the back of his neck, "when I think about you again and again… you’re my battery."
"My battery?" you laugh.
He nods, serious. "You recharge me."
That hits harder than you expect. "That’s really cheesy."
"Maybe," he says. "But it’s true."
You watch him for a second, then smile. "You should go eat."
He grins. "After five more minutes."
"Ryul."
"Okay, okay," he laughs. "But don’t hang up. Stay."
You nod. "I’ll stay.'
Jung Woojin - 정우진
Woojin doesn’t answer right away. When he does, the camera is shaky for a second before settling. He’s standing somewhere backstage, lights buzzing overhead.
"Hey!" he says, breathless with a smile.
"Oh are you busy?" you ask.
"No no," he replies immediately. "I'm never too busy for you."
You can hear people talking in the background, but he angles the phone so it’s just him.
"You look pretty today," he says suddenly. "Like always."
You blink. "I’m literally in pajamas."
"So?" he shrugs. "You’re a goddess, babe."
You scoff. "You’re lying to me."
He shakes his head, stepping into a quieter corner. "I’m not." he says, "My voice is literally shaking and everything."
"Now you’re flirting." you accuse.
"I was kinda flirting this whole time.." he grins. Then his smile softens. "You make me nervous, you know."
You raise an eyebrow. "You? On stage all the time?"
"Yeah." he admits. "But in front of you? Losing control."
His voice drops a little, more sincere now. "When I hear your voice, I forget what I was stressed about."
You smile at the screen. "You’re cute when you’re honest."
He laughs, embarrassed. "Please don’t tell the others."
"Too late."
He groans. "I knew it!"
"Go do your thing," you say gently. "I’ll be here."
He looks at you like that matters more than anything. "You promise?"
"I promise, Woojin."
Louis - 임지호
Louis calls late. Later than the others. You’re already half asleep when your phone lights up beside you, the screen too bright in the dark room.
You answer with a sleepy smile. "Hi."
There’s music playing softly on his end, low and familiar. He’s sitting on his bed, phone in one hand, the other resting behind his head like he’s trying to relax but didn’t quite get there on his own.
"Hi. I missed you." he says, plain and honest.
"Louis, you saw me this morning."
"And? Still," he shrugs. “When I miss you so bad, I take my phone out."
You laugh quietly, voice still heavy with sleep. "You’re ridiculous."
"Yeah, with you I am." he says.
He watches you for a second, eyes soft, like he’s just taking you in. Then, almost like an afterthought he says "You’re mine."
Your heart skips. "Louis."
He smiles, a little unsure now. "Too much?"
"Nooo.." you admit. "I mean it's true.."
He nods once. "Good."
There’s a comfortable silence. The kind that doesn’t ask for anything. The music keeps playing, steady in the background.
"Are you sleepy?" he asks.
"Yeah.."
"Please stay on," he says. "I like knowing you’re there. I wanna watch you sleep."
"Creep.."
You shift, curling closer to your pillow, phone pressed near your cheek. "Don’t hang up."
"Don't worry I won’t." he promises, voice low.
The call stays on, music humming softly between you, and Louis doesn’t look away even when your eyes start to close.
再見 ★ you and chao yufan were alike in the sense that you treated everything like a competition, and missed that the basis of human connection is cooperation and harmony. similarly, you were alike in the sense that you both forgot that in competition, there can only be one winner, and that the path to victory is paved with heartbreak and betrayal.
warnings ★ swearing, angst, mentions of sports-related injuries, reader whacks james over the head with a hockey stick (gently), both reader and james are stubborn brats, hella artistic liberties, reader being a foreigner is integral to the story, kissing, arguing, in-depth depictions and descriptions of injuries and panic attacks, unhealthy dynamics, age gap wherein james is older, i really milked all the angst i could out of this one guys i’m sorry, also my inaccurate descriptions of winter sports and really bad mandarin and hokkien sprinkled throughout. lmk if i missed any!
genre ★ nonidol au, sports au, strangers to friends, friends into lovers, and strangers again, mutual dislike to lovers, romance, sports drama, angst, figureskater!reader, hockeyplayer!james, brief figureskater!juhoon cameo, james x reader
word count ★ 30.9k
notes ★ for my talented girl. skye, you mean the world to me. since i can’t tell you directly how proud i am of you and how wonderful you are, i did it in the second best way i knew how: a 30k word angst fic with your bias and one of your forgotten passions. i hope i did it justice, mi amor.
listen to… back in taipei, and for the skating scenes, short programs and free skates!
YOU ONCE HAD A friend who hated airports. When you’d asked him, thoroughly perplexed and half in disbelief, he’d told you that it was because it meant departure. People left, and wouldn’t be able to see their loved ones until they returned. It reminded him of his mother leaving, he said, whenever she went to her home country and couldn’t bring him along.
You saw things differently. You saw them with the eyes of someone who wished to travel to lands of new opportunity, to places where you could leave your old self behind and start anew. A new place meant new people, new experiences, new sights, new outlooks on life. It reminded you of when you arrived in your new home country, young and naive and full of dreams.
It was in this way and many others that you and Chao Yufan differed.
Funnily enough, the first time you met him was in an airport. Or, well, close to one.
北京 BEIJING
2022
You were beat. While the flight from Taipei to Beijing wasn’t far, or long, or truly anything that warranted your current exhaustion, your endless training of the past week certainly was. Your limbs ached with overexertion as you climbed off the aeroplane, hauling your carry-on with you while your coach, Peiling, walked purposefully several paces in front of you.
The airport was busy as you made your way to the baggage claim area, filled to the brim with families and couples on their way to and from different places in the world. The energy was overwhelming in a manner that made your words fail you. The atmosphere was emotionally charged, charged with the weight of families separating for the holidays, or a couple reunited after a business trip. Teenagers leaving home, adults returning. It made the air smell sweet with emotion, tears and smiles and laughs and sobs all to be heard and experienced in scenes within mere metres of one another.
You, like several other athletes on your flight, had travelled to Beijing for the Junior Asian Winter Games to represent their country on an international scale. It wasn’t too big of an event, featuring only competitors from a few countries across the continent, but for someone of your calibre—who’d only ever performed locally—it was like landing on Mars. More important, in fact. All Mars had was craters and buggies. Beijing had everything.
It had been a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity given to you by a bored sponsor who had nowhere better to spend their money, but you didn’t care what it was that brought you here. All that mattered was that you’d made it, and you wouldn’t let the opportunity to make the best of it pass you by.
Baggage claim was as busy as the rest of the airport, filled to the brim with people fighting over who deserved to take their luggage first, who deserved to wait, and who deserved to lose an eye for the Louis Vitton suitcase that had made its tenth rotation without any sign of its owner stepping forward to claim it. You paused at the sight; the crowd, moving like one angry, sleep-deprived entity, and in a split second decided it would be physically safer for you to give up taking your luggage before you even started trying.
Unfortunately, you were travelling with an even angrier, even more sleep-deprived middle aged coach who was not about to waste her precious dollars simply because of your crippling anxiety, and so, you ventured into the storm.
As you made your way to the mechanical spiral which rotated everyone’s bags like a silent urge for them to step up and claim what was theirs, your shoulders continuously bumped by nainais out for blood, you thought to yourself that whoever said the eye of the storm was the calmest bit was a dirty liar and a certain cheat. You yelped when an older gentleman pushed you cleanly out of the way, your hard-earned strength failing you in the moment of shock. Peiling yelled something at him in her Northern drawl and he backed off immediately. After that terrifying interaction, you simply kept to the sides, the areas where people didn’t bother to wait, your gaze fixed on the moving conveyor belt, on the lookout for a large suitcase with a bright, shiny pink shell.
It was after a few moments of staring and zoning out that you spotted it, pointing towards it with a victorious sound as if your newfound powers of voice-activated telekinesis would make the thing levitate towards you. Alas, it did not, and you had to use your hands and arms like the rest of the world.
You picked it up with quite a bit of effort, less because you’d overpacked and more because whatever equipment you couldn’t fit in your carry-on had been thrown into your suitcase, which, given Beijing’s tight policies on carry-on weight, was most of it. You nodded to Peiling, widening your eyes as if to say, I’ve got it. We can go. She gave you a quick thumbs up and turned to leave, and you followed shortly after.
Sunset had inched over the horizon by the time you made it outside, the cold November air hitting your face and freezing your cheeks. Peiling raised her one free hand to hail a cab, pushing you into the open backseat once it arrived. You took a heavy seat while she loaded your luggage into the boot before finally joining you, sighing like an old man with joint issues. You watched in silent amusement as she got settled, noticed your stare, and smacked your arm, clicking her tongue in disapproval. “Aiya, you’re such a badly behaved child. Don’t laugh at your elders like that.”
“I wasn’t laughing!” you objected, though the giggle that you fought said differently.
She tsked. “Whatever. You and the rest of the athletes from Taiwan will be staying in the same hotel for the week that we’re here. Lights are out at nine, and you will be awake by six. I will not wake you up. Understood?”
“Yes, coach,” you said, still grinning like an idiot.
“Ai,” came the voice of your driver, fast-paced and slurred as you’d been told the Beijingers spoke. “You going to tell me where you want to go, or what?”
Peiling made a noise of irritation, but supplied nonetheless, “The Starlight Five Star, shifu. By Wonder Ice Sports Centre.”
He input the location in his GPS, asking, “You here for the Games?”
Peiling nodded. “Mm.”
He didn’t say anything after that, but you could see him nodding to himself as he drove off. Peiling leaned back in her seat, muttering something about Mainlanders before she asked you, “By the way, when did you add those stickers to your suitcase?”
You’d stolen someone’s suitcase.
This, you realised after you’d flopped unceremoniously onto your bed as Peiling made herself comfortable in her joint bedroom, zipping it open and finding it chock full of men’s clothes. Now, you weren’t necessarily the most outwardly feminine girl in the world, but you’d never gone as far as shopping in the men’s section, so you knew there was no way these clothes could’ve possibly been yours. Furthermore, the likelihood that you’d taken someone else’s luggage by mistake was only a bit higher than that of someone stealing all your clothes and replacing it with men’s clothes in some sort of sick act of villainy.
You sat up straight, a small, confused noise leaving your mouth as you rummaged through the stranger’s luggage in growing panic. Where you’d stored your signature leg warmers now were a pair of basketball shorts big enough to fit someone three times your size; where you’d packed a variety of hair products and creams for competition day, someone had carelessly chucked in a pair of shin guards and stocky gloves. And most importantly, where you’d neatly folded up the custom-made leotard your coach had spent half her life savings on, was simply a copy of some sort of anime film on DVD.
“What the hell is this?” you muttered, tossing more tubes of chapstick than was necessary for a man behind you, searching as if you’d find the contents of your suitcase beneath the layers and layers of his things. “How in the hell did this happen?”
“…When did you add those stickers to your suitcase?”
Your eyes widened, falling back onto your heels as a wave of realisation swept over you like the salty sea rollers on Fulong Beach. This wasn’t your suitcase. You’d taken someone else’s luggage, and were now armed with all the wrong equipment one day before the biggest competition of your career so far.
Ah, crap.
You groaned in frustration, dragging a hand over your face as you flopped onto your back, head falling against the soft, heavenly hotel pillows you’d be sleeping on for the night. Unfortunately, you were far too stressed to even be able to enjoy them.
From somewhere on the other side of your room, behind the door that joined Peiling’s with yours, you heard her shout, “What happened now?”
When you didn’t answer, she pestered, “Tell me why you sound like you’re dying, la!”
“I took someone else’s luggage at the airport!” you yelled back, screwing your eyes shut in embarrassment and exhaustion at your own uselessness. Maybe if you’d glanced at it more than once, or waited for another rotation you’d see that it clearly wasn’t your suitcase despite the uncanny resemblance it bore to it. For starters, it looked more worn, with chips and scratch marks yours didn’t have. The owner had customised it as well, with stickers and tags and his name and number in permanent ink and—
You sat up again, this time with more purpose as you recognised the familiar traditional characters jump in front of your eyes. Even after all these years, it took some time for you to be able to decipher every letter, but after a moment or two, you could fully read what was in front of you, murmuring the words as you went.
“If lost, please return to…” you narrowed your eyes, squinting to read the handwritten scrawl in the low light of your hotel room, “…please return to James Chao.” Then, beneath the message, the ten digits that would lead you to him.
Your one-eighty reaction must’ve given Peiling quite the scare, because when you yelped in victory and started shoving the stranger’s belongings back into his suitcase, slamming the pink shell shut and already reaching to your bedside table for your phone, she opened the door and rushed into your room, stormy eyes widened in an expression of shock. “What is it? Why are you making such noise so late at night?”
She looked a bit ridiculous, her dewy, done-up skin and fuzzy robe doing little to add to the shock and growing frustration in her voice.
“I stole someone else’s suitcase,” you said, rehashing the previous moments’ occurrences to her, “but then I saw that the owner wrote his name and number on the front, so I can call him and find him and get my suitcase back because, you know, since we have the same suitcase, it’s only right to assume he’d taken mine—anyway, I can find him and get my suitcase back as well, hopefully before the competition tomorrow.”
She gave you a long stare, before nodding in the way that told you she’d believe what you said, but that whatever you did was your responsibility. “Alright,” she murmured. “But you can’t rely on hope. You better pray to Mother Guanyin that this pans out, because if not, I’ll have you compete in sweatpants and borrowed skates. Understood?”
You shivered in equal parts horror and disgust. “Yes, coach.”
Peiling shook her head in obvious disappointment, while you made a mission of dialling the stranger’s number to call him. The phone rang for several moments before he picked up—chrrr… chrrr… chrrr…
“Yes?” came the voice of a very irritated James Chao. You could imagine him, the stranger, his face a blur of what his voice brought to mind, his brow furrowed in frustration. His voice was gentle, but persistent, raspy, a bit nasally in a way that wasn’t too annoying just yet.
What a bad time to be an introvert. And what an even worse time to be someone who performed badly socially under even the slightest bit of pressure. “Um, hi. I, uh… I’m…” You paused, giving him your name, and then, “I think I may have something of yours.”
The other line was silent for a moment. Then, “You better be the person who has my suitcase.”
“I am,” you said. “It’s a pink Louis Vitton with stickers and shit all over it, right? And it has, like, I don’t know what kind of equipment—”
“Hockey equipment,” he answered for you, with more snark than was truly necessary. “And yours has a bunch of sparkly tutus and, like, a shit ton of lip gloss. And… footless socks?”
“Leg warmers,” you corrected, more defensive than you’d meant to be. “They’re leg warmers. I’m a figure skater. I use leg warmers. My socks have feet.”
“Alright, okay,” he acquiesced. “Where are you?”
“The Starlight Five Star,” you said. “Right by—”
“Wonder Ice in Beijing,” he interrupted, a seconds’ realisation spoken into existence. You could imagine him furrowing his brows as he further grasped, “You’re Taiwanese.”
“I grew up there,” you corrected, brain on autopilot. You were used to pointing out the difference to people. “Not Taiwanese Taiwanese, but—”
“Doesn’t matter. You’re in Beijing to compete, right?” You nodded like he could see you, and he continued, “All of us are on the seventh floor. Find me in front of the elevator in fifteen minutes, and we can swap our bags. Got it?”
“Okay,” you said, nodding definitively. The longer you spoke to James, the more eager you were to hang up and get the interaction over and done with. “See you then.”
His final words to you were, “Yeah, whatever.”
Once you’d told Peiling what you’d arranged with James, and she let you go with a firm nod and an encouraging smack on your shoulder, you pulled on a jumper over your pyjamas and lugged the stolen suitcase out of your room and down the carpeted hallway. The elevator was several paces to the right of your room—because the event organisers loved you so much, they’d stuck you in the furthest corner of the seventh floor, meaning you had to walk past the skiing and curling teams who, in spite of the nine o’clock cutoffs for all athletes, were all still hooting and hollering like they were at a house party.
Your feet thumped gently on the carpeted floor as you made your way down the hall, James’ suitcase rolling silently behind you. You stopped at the elevator, as discussed, turning your head this way and that in search of someone to match your current state: tired, pyjama’d, and in the mood for business.
James Chao first appeared before you that night you’d accidentally taken his suitcase and he yours, long after the athletes’ curfew and only a few hours before both of you would be competing the following morning. Black hair swept over a pair of dark eyes narrowed in apparent frustration, smooth, tanned skin glowing under the warm lights of the hotel as he frowned like he’d been personally wronged. Which, if he was nearly as dramatic as he’d sounded on the phone, may or may not have been his personal truth. A baggy graphic shirt and basketball shorts swallowed the lean figure beneath, and just as you were about to get a proper look at him, he said,
“You scratched it.”
You paused. “What?”
“My suitcase. You scratched it.”
Frowning, you looked down at the hard shell in your hold, looking no less damaged than it had when you’d taken it from baggage claim. “Um, sorry,” you said anyway, because you weren’t in the mood to prove your innocence currently. “I didn’t mean to—”
“It’s whatever,” he dismissed. His voice was clearer in real life. I mean, of course it was, but, you know. He shook his head, looking as eager to get back to his hotel room as you were. “Anyway, uh, here’s your suitcase back.”
He rolled it out from behind him, and you did the same. For a moment or two, you both stood there in virtual silence, staring down at the other’s suitcase. You swore you heard crickets once the silence stretched to thirty seconds. Then, with just as many words as you’d exchanged beforehand, which is to say, none, you switched bags, and balance was restored to the universe once more.
James looked up at you, sent you a firm, definitive nod. You did the same. Despite the moments leading up to the interaction being less than desirable, you completed what needed to be done, and did so without that much of an issue.
Or so you thought.
As you turned to make your way back to your room, your suitcase rolling behind you, footsteps joined by the sound of James’ own, you heard him stop, slipper-clad feet skidding to a halt on the carpeted floor. Stop. Pause. Turn.
“You went through my stuff.”
You stopped. Paused. Turned. “Yeah,” you admitted, eyes narrowed in that same way that people who are in an outlandishly drawn out and overdone interaction do, the same way someone who shouldn’t have to be explaining themselves does. “I thought it was my bag, so I opened it up.”
“And, what, you just mess up your entire suitcase the moment you open it?” he asked. Oh, he was getting far too bratty for your liking.
You stepped forward, the movement like an accusation. “How do you even notice something like that?” you asked nonsensically. “Something so… so minute, so minuscule—”
“Big words for someone of your size,” he spat, equally as nonsensical.
“What the hell is that even supposed to mean?”
“You know damn well what it means!”
You threw up your hands in a gesture that you were sure conveyed your frustration, exhaustion, and impending insanity all at once. “What is your problem?!”
“What’s yours?”
You pointed at him frantically, as if he were the obvious answer. “You! You’re my problem!”
He pointed right back, index finger in your face and all. “And you’re mine! I have a game at seven tomorrow morning and I’m standing here arguing with you!”
“Oh, trust me, I do not want to be stuck defending myself against a diva with a competition only a few hours ahead of me,” you said. “The feeling is horridly mutual.”
He scoffed. “You’re such a pain.”
Before you got a chance to retort at all, much less properly, James turned on his heel and left, walking with the conviction of a man scorned. The last you saw of him was him walking down the hall, hips swaying this way and that with more sass than you felt was fit for a man.
And because you were so very mature, such an emotionally intelligent young woman who knew when to walk away from a confrontation, you turned and left once you grew sick of staring at his departing form, muttering to yourself, “Stupidhead.”
You hoped you never had to see his dumb face again.
台北 TAIPEI
TWO WEEKS LATER
It was only you in the rink before he arrived.
You swept across the ice, legs moving as if by their own will. The cold stung your cheeks and creeped in through your tights, the sort of cold that sat in the back of your mind while the rest of your body burnt with exertion, limbs starting to ache from the push and pull of temperatures. Music drifted from the speaker you’d placed somewhere outside the rink, possibly in the stands where you’d left your personal belongings, slow and melodic and not at all matching your current mood.
You huffed in frustration as yet another Salchow failed to come to fruition, the edge of your skate blade as uncooperative as it had been for the past several training sessions. Something about the way you moved, or the angle of your foot, or the ice—something had to be wrong, and you needed to find out what it was and fix it.
Peiling had told you that your second place performance in Beijing was good enough, which was rather uncharacteristic for her. She’d always been the one to push you to the edge, to test the limits of your abilities and patience. Her simply throwing in the towel and saying your performance in an international competition was good enough meant something. It meant she thought you were tired. Losing your edge. In a rut.
You were determined to prove her wrong.
Minutes turned into hours that you’d spent at the rink back in Taipei after your usual practice session; the rink where you’d first put on skates, where you’d spent birthdays and Christmases and good days and bad days on the ice. Where you’d found your purpose.
It seemed the longer you tried to perfect your moves, to swivel your body or sweep your skates a certain way, the more you seemed to be failing. Shinya Kiyozuka and his upbeat, romantic masterpieces weren’t exactly helping your mood, either, though you weren’t sure if anything else would. Maybe you were just being impossible today.
You knew every athlete had their off days. Days where nothing seemed to stick, where they seemed to forget everything they’d learnt until that point. Days where the universe didn’t seem to be ruling in their favour, where their coaches and teammates patted them on the back and said, “Maybe next time.” But you weren’t that sort of athlete, the sort that could afford to be bad for a day.
In between the jump and twists and the growing cold and the flakes of ice floating through the air you failed to notice the double doors of the rink swinging open languidly, nor the set of footsteps that came afterwards. You bent your knee deeply, gliding backwards with your leg raised, before planting it into the ice, twirling into the air, one, two, three times, arms raised high above your head. A simple triple flip, but it was more than you’d been able to achieve all day.
A sharp sound rang through the air. Once, twice, thrice before it gave way to a neverending cacophony that made you turn your head. Someone was clapping, approaching with their hands set in a lazy position of applause. It echoed throughout the entire rink, travelling across the ice and straight to your ears; piercing, the sort of sound that made people flinch.
James walked towards the ice with an undeniable swagger in his step, not unlike his gait when you first met him. Though, could you say met, when the whole interaction lasted less than five minutes? He looked different this time, more put together, standing taller, like he owned the world and it owed him everything. A jacket hung loosely around his frame, opening just enough to show the graphic tee he’d most likely hand-selected, silky black hair in meticulous tousles.
“What are you doing here?” were your first words to him since Beijing.
He didn’t say anything, hopping down the steps that led to the rink in silence, hands still braced for applause. Only until he reached the ice, leaning against the barrier separating you from normal ground did he say anything. He smiled, and it was difficult to deduce if it was friendly or not. “You’re pretty good, ice queen.”
You stayed planted in the middle of the ice that reflected white on your black stockings, matched your white leg warmers. You crossed your arms over your chest, not caring if the action made you appear petulant. “You say that like it’s a surprise. What are you doing here?”
While you couldn’t confidently assert that his face fell, there was a loss of amusement in his expression when it became clear you wouldn’t play ball with him. “I’m just here for some solo practice,” he explained, lifting the large duffel bag he’d slung across his front.
You paused. “You skate here, too?”
“Not during the week, usually,” he admitted. “But today’s a special day, it seems like. Practice got cancelled and my usual roller hockey rink is booked right now. So—” he grinned again, quick and sly— “here I am. And here you are. My problem.”
You were sure he meant it jokingly; as you could tell by the obvious switch from serious to sarcastic in his tone of voice. He was simply referencing the last time you met, when you called him your problem and he called you his. But there was something about the way he said it this time, snarkier and perhaps even more arrogant than before, derision in place of anger, that made you want to roll your eyes to the back of your head. What about him, exactly, enraged you so?
You’d find out soon enough.
Turning your back to him, you continued your desperate swipes and turns to try and mimic someone who knew what the hell they were doing. You weren’t convinced that you succeeded.
James watched, thankfully silent, leaned all the while against the barrier. Somewhere in between your several flutzes, he’d pulled on his gear; knee pads and skates and silver chains that dangled as he hopped over onto the ice, floundering a bit from the extravagant entrance.
“I watched you at the Games.”
This made you stop and, once again, turn towards the boy. You could guess he was a year or two older than you—not from how he spoke or composed himself, but from something deeper that told you things about him he didn’t even need to say himself. It was that same something that had told you to trust him down the line, the same something everyone has, telling them things they know about people they don’t. It’s important to remember that you can’t always trust when that something speaks.
“Oh, yeah?” you asked with feigned disinterest he’d never catch onto. “Thought you had a match at seven.”
“I did,” he said. “And your performance was at nine.” He skated towards you, gliding easily. “The rink you performed in was a five minute walk from ours.” He shrugged then, adding, “A few friends and I wanted to see what all the fuss was about after we won our match.”
“And?” you prodded. “Was it worth your time?”
“I’d say so, yeah.” He shifted one leg in front of the other, movements calm and effortless. “You’re pretty good.”
You preened at the compliment despite it being from someone you weren’t too fond of at that moment, because, like any teenager, you were a bit full of yourself when it came to the things you were good at.
James tilted his head. “But you’re too gentle.”
You scoffed. Too gentle. There was no such thing in a sport as graceful as figure skating. It didn’t matter that Peiling had told you the same thing three sessions ago, that your attempts at poise had made your art lacking. James didn’t need to know that. “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”
He didn’t let up. “I see what you try to do in your moves, it just translates wrong on the ice. Your gracefulness comes across as hesitance; that’s why you only got second place.”
You scowled, ignoring the pinch in your heart. He was a stranger who knew nothing about your craft, not even the simplest thing. Why would you need to listen to him? “I don’t need you to explain skating to me,” you snapped. His unwanted presence and unneeded commentary had become too much to bear. “I got in second because I slipped. Not because of anything you might’ve convinced yourself is relevant.”
“Listen, all I wanna do is help,” he tried, nearing you. In turn, you glided backwards, intent on keeping your distance. “You wanna win, don’t you?”
“What’s it to you?” you muttered.
“Nothing,” he confessed. “It’s not important to me. But it could be important to you.”
A long stretch of silence followed. You stayed where you were, James only a few paces ahead. From what you could see, he meant nothing ill by his words, though there was still something that kept you from replying just yet. Maybe it was your own scepticism. It was an odd scene, an odd interaction; the sort that comes so unexpectedly that you don’t even have the slightest idea of how to continue, so all you really can do is just that.
“You don’t look Taiwanese.”
“I’m not,” he said, “technically. Dad’s from Hong Kong and my mom is Thai.”
“Yet you play in the national youth league?” you asked.
“Yep.”
“Must be nice.”
He nodded, the action softer compared to his previous ones. While Taiwan had many excellent foreign athletes to represent the country, it took a lot of exceptional skill—more so than the locals required, many cried—for them to make it out of the foreign leagues they were so kindly sorted into. James could only imagine how hard it must’ve been on foreign kids, when he himself worked so hard to keep his place in the league as a local.
Then, with the finesse of a newborn fawn walking on solid ground for the first time, you switched the subject. “I saw a few of your highlight reels from the Games. You’re not bad.”
Good to know that twelve years of practice got him a compliment like that. “Thanks,” he said dryly. “I try my best.”
If you were to take him up on his offer—which you weren’t even sure you would just yet, it was just a silly, fleeting thought—you were, in essence, rolling a dice you had no idea even had numbers on. It would be a shot in the dark, a complete leap of faith towards someone you’d met once and were sure you held a great amount of contempt for.
But then, how would you know if the outcome would be bad? In short, you wouldn’t. You had just as much of a chance of learning something meaningful from him than you did wasting your time on him and vice versa. Like he’d said, it wouldn’t be important to him, but it could be important to you.
“The only thing is,” you started, grabbing his attention, “you’re like an elephant on the ice.”
James made a noise in the back of his throat, the crassness of your comment catching him off-guard. “Excuse me?”
“You don’t have any tact when you skate,” you pressed, “especially in handling the puck. It’s like you’ve got cement for hands.”
“What would you know about ice hockey?” he asked, snippy.
“As much as you’d know about figure skating,” you said.
He froze, mouth clamped shut in shock.
And checkmate.
You narrowed your eyes, watching him carefully. To an outsider it would’ve looked like a glance with reservations and its own opinions; maybe even to you. But what it really was was a look of assessment, a look that acted as the buffer between your thoughts and the answer they’d give you, the answer you’d soon give James.
“James is a pretty weird name for a Taiwanese kid,” you said. Half and half the truth and a fabrication, really. Most Taiwanese children answered to their Mandarin names, while some went on to choose English names as they expanded their professional horizons. “Is it your real name, or a Hong Kong thing?”
He didn’t answer your question, not fully. “My friends call me Yufan. Everyone else calls me James.”
“And what can I call you?” you asked.
“It depends. What would you like to call me?”
The statement in and of itself didn’t betray any deeper meaning, though you knew what he meant. Would you keep your distance from him, tell him that you didn’t need his help, remain professional, or would you say yes, accept his help, and become his mentee—even more, perhaps even his friend.
Maybe he’s lonely, you thought. Lonely and clueless on how to ask someone to be his friend. Or maybe he was just some prick on a power trip trying to make you feel bad about your skills.
You wouldn’t know unless you took a chance on him.
“Alright, how about this.” You clasped your hands together, earnest. “You give me pointers on how to improve my figure skating, and I’ll help you become better at ice hockey. It only seems fair,” you added as he went to protest, “since we’d only be assisting each other in specific elements. You good with that?”
He seemed to mull over your proposal, though he seemed unhappy to learn that you were not impressed with his own skill. “Fine,” he said begrudgingly. He stuck out his hand for you to shake, wriggling his lean, ringed fingers. “Training buddies?”
You took it, your palm cold against his warm skin. “Training buddies.”
Before you knew it, weeks had passed.
James became a regular feature in your life since he’d rather rudely inserted himself into it, squeezing himself in between your Tuesday cram school and your Thursday solo training. He always arrived with a smile on his face, though the contents of it always differed; some days he was smug, impatiently tapping your legs as he waited for you to get a manoeuvre right; other days he was soft, assuring you that not having the strength you needed to do a certain drill wasn’t the end of the world, even when you acted like it was.
Similarly, you’d been able to whip him into shape with the mindset of a ballet teacher in skates, stern and precise and never in the mood for the endless nonsense he dished out. You balanced each other’s energy like that. Where you were rigid schedules and languid, flowing movements, James was pure, unfiltered bursts of creativity and crashes into barriers. He showed you how to colour outside the lines, and you taught him how to outline the sketches he needed to play.
But before all that happened, more than a few things went wrong.
Before you learnt how to trust him, you’d hit him over the head with his own hockey stick.
The air was tense, alight with the anger and frustration you shared. James glared at you with the fire of a thousand suns burning in his eyes, jaw set in a scowl that made your blood curdle. “You’re a little brat, you know that? A brat who refuses to cooperate the moment she has to do something she doesn’t want to—”
“Don’t you dare talk to me like that,” you snapped.
“I’ll talk to you however I want,” he shot back. “As long as you keep being useless—”
Right, said the reasonable part of your brain. Enough is enough. So, in a split-second decision, you grabbed the stick he’d been holding—the old but sturdy taped-up contraption he’d been using to correct your posture that didn’t need correcting—and reared your arms back, coming down hard on his back as he ducked for safety.
You didn’t hurt him that badly, you could see afterwards. But he made sure to milk the shit out of your sympathy once you realised what you’d done.
Before he learnt how to take you seriously, he told you stipid things like,
“You know, you shouldn’t act so haughty all the time. You and I both learnt the same things in beginners skating lessons.” He glanced you up and down in a way that you weren’t sure if it was judgemental or merely observant. “You’re not teaching me anything new, here.”
You paused, your arms still braced in the elegant position you’d been in to demonstrate the gentler movements that would help him during matches. You placed your hands on your hips in a very unladylike fashion, scowling. “Last I checked, I’m not a beginner figure skater, and last I checked, I don’t constantly injure myself because of my poor form.”
He scoffed. “Pfft—okay, my form is not that bad—”
“You skate like a fucking pensioner.”
“—defence players are literally the best skaters on the ice. And we play two different sports! You can’t compare the styles of the two.”
You raised a brow. “I thought you just said we learnt the same basics.”
He froze. “Shit, yeah. Okay. That— that was on me, this time.”
Before you learnt to work together like a well-oiled machine, you’d bruised yourselves bumping heads like bulls.
“If you think, for even one second, I’m going to skate laps around this rink while you sit on your ass and time me, you’ve got another thing coming.”
“And if you think I’m just going to stand here and argue with you all afternoon instead of getting shit done, you’ve got an even bigger thing coming. Put on your skates.”
You threw him a filthy look, still stubbornly in your worn trainers. “Make me, princess.”
“I’ll make you eat your hands, is what I’ll make you do,” he replied, pressing his index finger halfway to your face.
However, after several gruelling hours and unproductive days, you realised that it was in both your best interests to simply pretend like you got along. And it worked.
You watched with bated breath as James glided across the ice, parroting the moves you’d shown him earlier. Left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot, turn, and repeat. Since you’d given him your begrudging, hard-handed guidance, he’d become more graceful in his skating, more careful in his movements. He no longer moved with the tact of a baby elephant, and he’d even gotten better at handling his puck, though you had nothing in particular to do with that.
James looked back at you from over his shoulder, eyes expectant and awaiting your praise. “How’s this? Am I doing it?”
Manoeuvring your soft expression into a manner of nonchalance, you leaned your arms against the barrier, shrugging your shoulders. Your leg raised behind you in a subconscious movement, a stretching exercise Peiling had drilled into you so effectively that you did it without thinking. “You’re getting there,” you admitted, watching as he perfected the exercises you’d told him to work on in his downtime.
James’ face fell to an unimpressed scowl at the impartial remark, but he could easily fool himself into thinking he saw, if just for a moment, a glimmer of pride in your eyes when he first turned to you. It was a quick, fleeting look you’d given him when you thought he couldn’t see, but he caught on. He always did. After all, he was a defenceman. He needed to keep a keen eye.
And before you fell apart, Chao Yufan showed you a part of him that he hadn’t shown anyone else.
“You know, it’s kind of difficult to believe you don’t like Yufan.”
Those were the first words that your senior and longtime comrade spoke to you since returning from a training camp in China.
Lin Shihan was one of the most renowned Taiwanese figure skaters in the world of winter sports, Peiling’s first prodigy and, most importantly, the girl you’d been calling ‘big sister’ for as long as you could remember. She entered the rink with a look on her face, because that seemed to be the way everyone you knew was greeting you these days, and crossed her arms over her chest. She was dressed in her civvies, a stark contrast to your fitted black training gear—tights, skirt, top, leg warmers and all—her hair done up in its usual tight bun.
She’d met James in passing a few times, even though their schedules almost never overlapped. The interactions had been friendly enough, from what you could deduct. All you knew she thought of him was that he had too much attitude and that she refused to call him James on account of being older than him. Not that she had any knowledge of your dynamic, much less persuasions or opinions of it.
You turned to her with wide eyes, because you were used to her greeting you with a little more than a wild accusation that you liked your training buddy. Usually she gave you a, “Hey, how was your week?” Sometimes you were even lucky enough to get, “I missed you while I was gone.” Not today, it seemed.
“What… is that supposed to mean?” you asked dumbly.
“Oh, don’t play dumb with me,” she scoffed, motioning for you to skate closer. You did, stopping only a few centimetres short of where she stood, leaning your elbows against the barrier as you came closer for some serious girl talk, because that’s what her expression told you you were in for. She quirked a brow, as if challenging you to tell her differently from what she believed. “I’ve seen you two training together. You’re soooo yunlan.”
“Nuh-uh,” you scoffed petulantly. “Am not.”
“He definitely likes you,” she added quickly. Unfortunately—or perhaps fortunately, for her—you caught it. Her brown eyes shifted from somewhere in the middle distance to you, like she was trying to be nonchalant and failing on purpose, like people do in the movies when they want someone to realise something. And you did.
You gasped. “He does not!”
“Say what you want,” she sang, “but the proof is all there.”
“He literally hates me,” you said, perhaps a bit dramatically. “We only train together because we need each other’s help, you know that. Outside of that, we practically never talk. And he’s always so rude to me! Remember that time he wanted to trip me just because he felt like it? That’s so not yunlan behaviour.”
She shrugged. “He’s pulling on your pigtails.”
You pointed an accusatory finger in her face. “You do not exist to plant doubt about my training buddy in my brain, okay? That is not your purpose in the plot.”
“I kind of do,” she said. “Isn’t that what big sisters are for? Making you doubt yourself? No,” she corrected herself, tilting her head. “That’s what coaches are for.” She turned back to you, smug. “I’m just here to annoy you.”
“Why are you even here to talk about James?” you whined. “You just came back from Harbin, and the first thing you do instead of telling me about the competition is tease me about a crush I don’t have.”
She sighed, rolling her eyes like you asking about her trip was the last thing she wanted to talk about. “Fine. What do you want to know about the trip? I went, I won. I remain the undefeated champion in Asia for women’s singles in the senior division.”
“Well… what was your hotel like?” you enquired innocently.
“Big.”
“And Harbin? What’s it like this time of year?” you tried again.
“Cold.”
You threw up your hands in a hopeless gesture. “You’re doing that on purpose!” you accused. “You’re trying to make me less interested in Harbin so you can bother me about my nonexistent crush on James. And don’t say it’s not nonexistent,” you said, catching her look. “Because it’s not. Not nonexistent. It’s not— it doesn’t exist.”
“Ugh, why are you so opposed to a little romance?” she asked. “You’re a teenager. Shouldn’t you be all over a cute older guy like him?”
“I’m not opposed to it,” you said. “It’s just not the most important thing to me right now.”
“And, what? Skating is?” Shihan shook her head. “You can’t live your whole life like that.”
An uncharacteristically solemn silence followed.
You deflated, your posture growing sloppy where it once had been stilted, standing at attention. Her statement hung in the air, blunt and unsoftened by a joke or jest as it usually would’ve been. The air was cold, more so than before, and you felt the tips of your fingers beginning to numb.
You knew she was right. She hadn’t even affirmed her position outright; all she’d done was ask you a question and tell you that you couldn’t live your life a certain way. But you knew well enough what she meant—your whole life, short-lived as it had been until that point, could not revolve around one thing and one thing only. You were a teenager with all the time and opportunity in the world. Why didn’t you take a break every now and then?
You knew, and so did Shihan, that there was no such thing as a break when it came to this sport. Figure skaters started young, competed young, dominated young, and spent the rest of their lives either still competing or training other young ones. You started when you were five, competed from the age of ten, dominated from thirteen up until now, and would probably spend the rest of your life doing the same.
You couldn’t—wouldn’t—start resting, kicking back, enjoying life now. Or ever, for that matter. You weren’t destined for a life of joy and relaxation. You were destined for greatness. And that came at the price of your childhood; a price you were already paying; a price you wouldn’t stop paying until you were standing on that first place podium at the Winter Olympics. Who cares what you wanted out of life? It wasn’t about you, or being yourself, but what you owed to everyone who helped you in getting to where you were now; too far along to be able to give up, too privileged to be able to complain about something as small as freedom.
“I know you think so,” you said, and she took careful note of your word choice. Then, mustering up a small smile, you added, “I’ll try to have some fun this year. How’s that sound?”
Good enough for me, her expression seemed to say. Keenly looking into your doleful eyes, your empty smile. You tried. You really did. You tried to be positive for her. But she knew, she’d been where you were. She was where you were. There was no positivity for anyone or anything that did not get you to where you needed to be, which was in first place. You wouldn’t let anything get in your way. Not friends, not family, not cram school, and certainly not a boy.
Though, in hindsight, you didn’t much mind letting James get in your way, did you?
The city of Taipei was busiest at night, when the streets were filled with people and the night sky was lit up by street lamps and neon signs. Marketplaces were especially crowded, with tourists and locals alike bumping elbows to try and get to their favourite stalls, nainais and ahyis yelling to be heard over the hustle and bustle of the vendors. You steered James through the teeming streets, his bigger hand fitting snugly in yours as you tried to locate the stall you’d been telling him about all week. You moved with the purpose of a girl on a mission, ready to prove yourself correct.
It all started one afternoon after training, when Peiling and James’ coach, Chen Yuhsuan—a man in his forties who seemed to have an oddly extensive, tense history with your own coach—had let you go for the day and you were left to your own devices. It had become something of a routine for the two of you to get lunch together, at a small place just a hop, skip and a jump away from the train station you parted ways at in the evenings, when it was high time for you to return home. You’d been sitting across from him at your usual table, a low, rickety wooden thing that cramped your legs together, making your knees knock each other’s, when James had casually mentioned being a street food connoisseur, and that, in his highest opinion, you were wrong about which street food was the best.
“I’m sorry?” you’d said, pitch picking up at the end as an indication of incredulous question. “What do you mean gua bao isn’t the reigning champ of Asian street food?”
“I mean just that,” he replied, taking a nonchalant spoonful of his congee. “Pad kee mao is undoubtedly the best of the best. You’ll never get anything better, like—” he shrugged, as if the truth were out of his hands— “anywhere.”
“Okay, that… is just objectively wrong,” you said. “Gua bao is a classic that no food in the world can compare to. That’s just a fact.”
He pouted, as if sympathetic. “I can’t blame you for thinking that way. Taiwan doesn’t have the best Thai cuisine, so you’ve probably never tasted pad kee mao in its native excellence. You’ve only got a limited scope of the best food in the world.”
You scowled, jabbing your chopsticks threateningly in his direction. “Don’t speak so definitively, prettyboy. Soon enough, you’ll be proven wrong.”
He raised a singular, dark brow. “Oh, yeah? How so?”
“I’ll take you to the best gua bao spot in Taiwan,” you promised. “Next week, after practice, at this night market by the station.”
He leaned back in his seat, the tips of his fingers playing with the rim of his glass, the plum-coloured and flavoured drink casting a pinkish glow over his hand, smiling in amusement. “…Fine. It’s a date.”
You’d balked. “It is?”
He tilted his head. “If you’d like for it to be.”
Which brought you here, a week later, on your not-a-date date, ready to prove him wrong and change his perspective on the world and food as he knew it.
You found the stall easily enough, if not for its bright lighting and in-your-face advertising, then certainly for the heavenly smell of braised pork belly and fluffy white steamed bread. You let go of James’ hand, showing it off with a flourish and a tada~! he seemed to find adorable. He glanced blankly up at the sign, the warm lights from the overhead lanterns casting a white glow over his glasses, like a character from those mangas he read religiously.
He didn’t say anything as you ordered two of your usual, the classic, the timeless, the unforgettable gua bao as made by Nainai Chen, who’d been making them the same way since before either of you were born. You waited with thinly-veiled anticipation threatening to spill over at even the slightest indication from James’ side that he was anything other than neutral towards what was happening in front of him. A small part of you hoped he knew you’d never done something like this for anyone before. Taken someone out to one of your favourite stalls, the place you kept hidden away from everyone you knew for fear that they would make it their own place.
Yeah. You gatekept your favourite things. So what?
A bigger, more rational part of you knew he probably just thought of this as a friendly outing. A platonic hangout with his younger friend whom he terrorised sometimes. He’d joked about it being a date, but, of course, that’s all it had been—a joke. James Chao was a professional joker, no one to take seriously. Sure, he made jokes, and sure, he was handsome in his own unique way… with nice hair, and tanned skin, and plump lips that were accentuated out by his adorable yet very faint overbite. Why were you thinking of him romantically, again? You weren’t. Didn’t. You didn’t.
Once she finished wrapping up your food, you gave Nainai Chen a grateful bow, paying her several dollars more than you were supposed to, like you always did. She’d learnt to stop refusing your extra money, merely taking it with a kind smile on her weathered face.
You turned to James with your hand already outstretched. He accepted his bao, and you waited in trembling anticipation for his final verdict as he took his first bite. And then his second. And his third. And his—
You threw up your hands, starting, “Oh, come on—!”
“It’s good,” he nodded, chewing thoughtfully. Then, noticing your look, he grinned. “Still not better than pad kee mao, though.”
You deadpanned. “You’re kidding.”
“I maintain that you just haven’t had good drunken noodles yet,” James asserted, while you took an angry bite of your gua bao. “I’ll take you for some proper ones sometime. Promise.”
“Thought you said Taiwan doesn’t do Thai cuisine justice,” you pointed out. “You gonna book us tickets to Bangkok after playoffs, or something?”
“I actually know someone who makes pretty good pad kee mao in Taipei,” he said. He glanced at you, catching onto your questioning look, and said simply, “Mama Chao.”
Your eyes widened. “Your mom?”
“Yep. She’s no chef, but you wouldn’t know that if you only knew her from her cooking. She makes some of the best noodles this side of the world,” he boasted, while you were still trying to process the fact that he wanted you to meet his mother and, by extension, his father, as well.
Meeting the parents had never been such a big deal between friends, so the fact that you were freaking out was perhaps a bit dramatic. But it was different for pairings like you and James. Girls and boys. Even if you were friends, strictly and only ever friends, there’d still always be that added element your biological differences brought to the equation. People still expected most friendships like yours to end in romance, especially parents. What would they think when James brought you home, the girl he’d been training with since November? And for dinner, no less?
He didn’t mention his mother again that night. Not after you drifted from Nainai Chen’s legendary gu bao stall, nor when you walked further into the marketplace in search of something sweet. Not after you’d given up halfway through your mission and opted for convenience store ice cream, nor when you took a seat at a bus stop situated under the stars.
He did say something else, though. When you were halfway through your caramel-flavoured treat, your lips swollen from the chill and covered in sugar, his voice, softer than usual, rang through the air like church bells.
“Why did you agree to be my training buddy?”
You turned to him. You’d been waiting for the moment he’d ask that inevitable question, for the day those words left his plush lips.
“Hockey players always have something to learn from you guys,” he continued, “but figure skaters… you were already talented enough. So why did you even… I don’t know. Why’d you even give me the time of day?”
You squinted up at the moon, bright and pale and silently basking in its glow. “Why did you ask me if you could give me pointers?”
“Honest?” You nodded, and he said, “Because I didn’t know how else to catch or keep your attention.” His eyes flicked to yours, and briefly, swept over your lips. “I dunno if you’ve noticed, but I’m pretty bad at making friends.”
You smiled softly, exhaling through your nose. Not a laugh, not nothing. “Honest?” He nodded, and you said, “Because I wasn’t sure of myself. I mean, I know it sounds stupid. A figure skater not being confident in herself. Crazy, right?”
“Not crazy,” he said softly. “Stupid, maybe. But not crazy.”
You sighed. “Yeah, well.” A grin picked at your mouth. “I know how to do everything. I know how to throw my weight around and to twirl seventy times without puking. But after a while, doing the same routine— the same moves, to the same music, in the same glittery tutu… it gets old, and I lose myself a little bit. When you came around, I’d been in a slump for months. I was consistently placing second in all my competitions, and nothing I did could fix it.”
You remembered when you’d first told Peiling about your plan, she took it surprisingly well. In fact, she—and don’t fall out of your chair when I say this—agreed with what you suggested.
You’d been standing across from her on the ice before one of your usual training sessions, hands floating through the air as you gesticulated, when she nodded in understanding. “Cross-training isn’t too out of the ordinary,” she mentioned, laying a thoughtful hand on her hip. “It’s usually hockey players that train like figure skaters to improve their skating skills, but it’s not unheard of to go the other way around. I didn’t suggest it to you because you’d been performing perfectly until now. Though after Beijing…”
She tilted her head, her face already telling you before she even needed to say a word.
Coming in second wasn’t bad in itself. Silvers were better than nothing in any sport. However, when you went from winning gold at every competition to consistently placing second as you supposedly progressed, well, that was a different story altogether. You knew you were gold medal material; you knew you had the makings of a star in you. That’s what made your silver medals so humiliating. You were so close, you came so close, to winning every competition you qualified for, but you lacked that little bit that separated you from proper winners.
And you couldn’t have that, not for one second.
You tried to ignore the sinking feeling in your gut at her words, wringing your hands in anticipation. “So… would it be possible for us to train together?”
Her face softened. “Of course. We’ll just need to get his coach’s contact details, and set up a training schedule that doesn’t interfere with either of your plans during the week. After that, we can get down to the specifics of what you need to improve on, and what he can learn from you.”
“I didn’t need to improve,” you said. “But I needed inspiration again. And you…”
“I’d suggest that we switch out Tchaikovsky for some Arctic Monkeys, maybe?”
“Mm. How about you try that one combination… the spinny one and the one that has something to do with toes? Like you did that other time.”
“Let’s just throw shit around and see what sticks, okay?”
You chuckled. “You helped a lot.”
“Oh, yeah?” Yufan grinned. “I’m an inspiration to you, huh?”
“Shut up,” you murmured, shoving his shoulder. But you didn’t say no.
The sound of your skates gliding against the ice filled the air as you and Yufan did a few laps around the rink, legs moving languidly behind you, your gaze trained over your shoulder to see where you were going.
“Remember to keep those knees bent!” you called, turning to look in front of you where Yufan was very earnestly focusing on your command, easily dropping lower on his knees, switching more weight onto the outer edges of his skates as you rounded a corner.
“You know, I find it very interesting how, in the three weeks we’ve trained together, you haven’t once picked up a hockey stick,” he said. “Except for that time you hit me with one.”
You squeezed your eyes shut, running a hand over your warming face. “I told you I was sorry about that.”
“I deserved it,” he conceded. “But that’s not my point. I’ve been learning all these fancy figure skating moves—and for a good reason, of course… I just— I’d like to… I dunno.” He sped up, inner edges taking the brunt of the acceleration. “I’d like to maybe, if you’d like, teach you sometime.”
You smiled as he stuttered his way through the proposal. “What, to play ice hockey?”
“Or roller hockey,” he added, shrugging. “Whichever one you’re more interested in.”
“I’m not really interested in either of them, if I’m gonna be honest with you,” you said. “The idea of me playing hockey sounds terrifying. I’d, like, take someone’s eye out.”
“It would probably be mine,” Yufan said. “And I wouldn’t be opposed to that. It gets me one step closer to my true dream: being a pirate.”
You shook your head, fitting in a quick toe loop before gliding to a halt. “You’ve got your heart set on this, don’t you?”
He stopped in front of you, only a metre and a bit between your bodies. “As a matter of fact, I do, yeah.”
Ever since that night at the marketplace, Yufan had been acting differently. Not oddly, per se—or, perhaps, any more odd than he did usually—but not close to normal, either. He’d been friendlier, softer, uncharacteristically gentle towards you. He gave you nothing but encouraging smiles and sure words, it almost made you suspicious. And, God, the way he looked at you… with such tenderness, with affection so unlike him. It made your knees weak in all the best and worst ways.
You narrowed your eyes then, your suspicion finally reaching its boiling point when he gave you another one of those damn smiles. “Okay, what is it with you, these days? You’re all cheesy, and now you’re suddenly asking me if I want to learn hockey from you? What’s wrong? Are you dying, or something?”
He scoffed. “No. I— I just…” Hanging his head, he gave a tiny, adorable sigh. “Can’t a guy ask a pretty girl out?”
“Well, yeah, but— wait, what?”
“You heard me.”
You stared at him. Hard and long. “Yeah, I did. Clear as damn day. What I’m asking is, like— are you sure? Are you sure you have the right girl?”
He tapped his chin, his gaze turning heavenwards as he pretended to think. All the while, he floated closer to you, his warmth entering your sphere. “Yeah, I’m pretty sure I do.”
“You… want to take me out,” you said.
“That’s the gist of it, yeah,” he replied.
“Is that allowed?”
He snorted. “What?”
“Like— I don’t know.” You made a vague shape in the air with your free hand, the other coming up to press against your hip, the aching joint throbbing beneath your palm. “I just— I don’t know! You’re asking me out and you’re standing right there and you’re, like, really pretty and you’re making me nervous!”
He frowned. “Sorry,” he apologised, though you could see the faintest hint of a smile creeping through his expression. “I mean, it’s a pretty easy question to answer. Just— say yes or no.”
You glanced at him, and for a moment, caught in his expression the slightest bit of hesitation. That’s when you realised this was as much of a risk for him as it was a surprise for you. And that made deciding just a little bit easier.
“I, um… I’d love to play out hockey with you.” Your eyes widened. “I— What I mean to say is that I’d love to take you out for hockey. Or you— I’d love for you to take me out to play hockey… Jeez! Sorry. I don’t know what happened there.”
That got a laugh out of him, breaking the bright beam he’d worn the entire time you stuttered through your acceptance. “It’s fine. I understood you the first time.”
You smiled breathlessly.
And that was all Yufan needed.
You didn’t play hockey for your first date. Or your second. Or third, or… any of them. In fact, you didn’t even near the ice until you became familiar enough with one another to know your something unnamed had become something quietly expected. Something implied.
He promised to take it slow with you, not only because neither of you had ever been in a relationship before, but because you had so many external engagements that, well, proper dating wasn’t exactly an option just yet. One of these many engagements, of course, was game season.
Out of all the winter sports, ice hockey was reputed as being one of the most invigorating amongst athletes, and once you started going to Yufan’s games, you understood why. The rink was cold, filled to the brim with people sitting in the stands, cheering as the players swept across the ice, blurs of blue and red and black and yellow. The air was alight with the glimmering of ice shavings from how quickly the players raced over the ice, like glitter under the harsh lights.
You sat back in your uncomfortable plastic seat, knees to your chest as you watched with a keen eye what occurred only a few metres below you. Yufan rushed along the ice, no more than a smudge of colour. Yet you spotted him as if it were second nature, eyes catching onto the bright lettering on the back of his jersey. Taipei Polar Bears. Number 16.
Despite having played it a few times, you weren’t one hundred percent sure how ice hockey worked. Or, honestly, even ten percent. Zero would be the closest estimate, in this scenario. Your eyes flicked continuously from the rink to your phone screen, which was open on a Wikipedia page on the rules and play-by-play of ice hockey, for whenever the announcers spewed some nonsense over the intercom like,
“Our local Taipei Polar Bears are far behind at only three points midway, while Les Champions de Marseille stay true to their names and dominate with double that.”
I won’t go too in-depth into what happened in the game, not only because you weren’t a hockey player and therefore had no idea what was going on, but because I, the author, have even less idea of what was going on.
Long story short, things happened, good and bad. Yufan whizzed past other players, stole the puck from them, did everything in his power to stop the other team from scoring. From what you heard, defencemen could have either constant or nonexistent contribution to scoring; Yufan seemed to be somewhere in the middle, switching between offensive and defensive play dependent on what he deemed necessary in that particular moment. All you could do was watch, perhaps with small hearts thumping where your irises would’ve been, perhaps not.
Players pushed each other into the barrier, the audience yelled obscenities, and so went the spirit of ice hockey. For all your lack of knowledge on the game, you could feel that there was an undeniable tension in the air. The team’s captain and Coach Chen seemed to be butting heads every other intermission, while things escalated between the two teams. The French skaters seemed to think significantly less of the Polar Bears, and it was clear in how they spoke of them to the referee. Every now and then they’d skate over to the short, weathered man, and rapid fire what looked to be enraged French when a mistake had been made on the referee’s side. Even the translator didn’t look happy.
If this game had a soundtrack, the song to set the scene playing out in front of you probably would’ve been something off of Verdi’s Requiem. Skaters yelling expletives at one another, pushing each other against the barriers, blood spattering the ice as those with authority tried to keep things civil to no avail. Pucks being chucked from one end of the ice to the other, sticks breaking, skates skidding.
Two of the Polar Bears’ forwards had turned to one another, yelling something about the centre focusing too much on flair and too little on actual play, exchanging curses back and forth in Mandarin and Hokkien. Yufan stood between them, hands braced on both of their chests, holding them apart with growing annoyance. He said something, the words too soft to travel across the ice and through the chaos, but they didn’t let up in their argument, skating away while pointing fingers at one another.
You’d asked Peiling what to expect of a game of ice hockey, and she’d told you to prepare yourself for anything. You wondered how she knew, why her eyes became misty when she said, “All I can tell you from the hockey games I’ve been to…” Regardless of her past with the sport, she was right. You had to prepare yourself for anything. The only downside?
You hadn’t.
You sucked in a sharp breath as the intermission was over, and the game was on again. Something about sitting there in the stands, surrounded by strangers who shared your interest and perhaps misguided passion in ice hockey—it invigorated you. And something about watching Yufan as he rushed across the ice, skating with the finesse of a professional dancer, made your heart thump harder than you thought possible.
After the game, you found Yufan at the entrance of the teams’ locker rooms, sweaty and breathless and starry-eyed like no other. You caught each other’s eyes across the hall, people passing by you in a haze, and you asked a silent question. Shall we? And he nodded without hesitation.
One of your many after-game rituals was going out for hotpot at one of your regular spots. No parents, no friends, no teammates. Just the two of you. It was something that had begun as a way to connect when you started training together, and it had just stuck and stayed strong till now. He sat across from you in the crowded restaurant, fingers deftly clasped around his chopsticks as he ate. He said nothing; you knew he wouldn’t, not for the first few minutes. It always took him a moment to regain his breath, get his brain out of the game and back to you.
“You did well out there,” you spoke into the silence, over the sound of the bubbling soup between you.
He glanced at you, hooded eyes clear in their question, in their understanding. “Even when we lost six-four?”
You shrugged. “I don’t care about any of that. All I care about is how good you did for yourself in the game, and… you did.”
A nod from his side, eyes set in a pensive stare. He’d confided in you before that this particular season had been hard on the team, what with all their consistent losses and all the fights that broke out amongst them. You thought, maybe, that he was in a similar position to you a few months ago. Coming so close to victory, the tips of your fingers brushing a gold trophy, and making it just not far enough.
It affected him; at the very least, his morale when playing. And you, noticing as you did everything, tried to lighten up the mood whenever he started brooding.
“And don’t call me ‘Ice Queen’. It’s stupid.”
Yufan smiled. “Nice to know you see my solo potential in a team sport.” He adjusted his posture, sitting further back in his chair. “What else am I supposed to call you, then? Would you like to be demoted to ‘Ice Princess’?”
You scoffed softly. “I’d just like it if you called me something normal guys called their…” You paused, because your words had, for lack of a better term, utterly failed you. What were you? Were you boyfriend and girlfriend? Were you training buddies who went on dates? Were you too young to try and label whatever romantically-charged relationship you had with a boy who was how many years your senior?
He quirked a brow. “…Girlfriend?” he wondered gently, doing nothing to hide his amusement at your hesitation. “You seem like you’d be my girlfriend by now.”
You tilted your head. “Oh, yeah?”
“Uh-huh. I don’t go on dates with just anyone.”
You pretended to give the statement an ounce of thought, when in reality, you’d be thinking about those nine words for years to come. “Well, then, what would you call your girlfriend?”
He mimicked your expression, cocking his head to the side as if in thought. “Lots of things. Pretty girl, for one. Babe. Stupid… Ice Queen.”
“No fair! You’re not allowed to reuse shit ones just ‘cause you think it’s funny to make me mad!”
He laughed this time, loud and true, the sound bursting through the thick air that hung between you. It was a nice thing to hear; a rare thing to witness. Chao Yufan was not someone who laughed easily—he was too serious for that. Or so he would like to have you believe. You knew, though. You felt it. There was something in you that told you he was happier than he let on.
You didn’t know then not to trust that fickle, unreliable something.
Yufan was three things when he was in love.
First, he was gentle. All soft smiles and laughs you could barely hear over the chatter of whatever place you’d found yourselves in. He placed loving hands on your face when he squeezed your cheeks between his fingers, murmuring something about how you looked like a flower, in that voice reserved for you, and only you.
He still teased you, of course. That seemed to be something he would never be able to let up. His childishness; his mischievous nature. It was unrelenting in its intensity and recurrence, neverending tongue-in-cheek comments meant anywhere between endearing and straight up mocking.
One afternoon, you’d been sitting together on the pavement outside his family home, arms tucked under your legs as you waited for either one of you to gain the confidence to say it was time for you to go home. Time for you to part, time for you to say goodbye, to say, “Until next time.”
The sun had already begun to set, sunk below the high rises and apartment buildings dotting the city, yet the air was alight with activity, with sound, with sights. It was as if Taipei itself was telling you, Not yet. Taunting, Look, I’m still awake. What reason is there for you to leave now?
Yufan looked at you, if he hadn’t already been looking. You sat next to him, eyes fixed on something in front of you, something he couldn’t see, bathed in the glow of the setting sun. Hues of purple and pink and orange and red covered the patchy, imperfect surface of your skin, your silver jewellery glinting like stars next to your full cheeks. You were so pretty, like something straight out of an old film. That, he decided, was a face worth pining for. And he did, quietly, whenever you weren’t looking, weren’t listening as intently as you always did. Weren’t ready to ruin the moment with your stupid humour, your unnecessary little quips.
Like now, when you noticed him staring, and a wide, shit-eating grin spread across your plump lips. “What’re you looking at?” you asked, accent exaggerated like those cute girls in dramas from the Mainland.
He rolled his eyes, because he’d been caught out. Again. Said, “Not you, that’s for sure,” because he had no other appropriate response. Because he was a teenager who wasn’t used to the feelings swirling in his heart at that moment, and being cruel is easier than being honest.
You stuck your tongue out at him, blowing a raspberry while your eyes screwed shut. “Boo, you ass.”
He mimicked your expression, giving you a light shove with his weaker hand. The one that wouldn’t be able to pack as much of a punch as it usually would’ve, because he’d hurt it trying to show you a cool trick with his hockey stick earlier. “You’re so much prettier when you shut that big mouth of yours.”
And you smiled, because you knew, or you thought, beneath all those layers of defensiveness and snippy jokes, Yufan really did like you. After all, what else would he keep you around for?
Second, he was reverent. Not a day went by where he didn’t admire your skill, or your tact, or your beauty, or that little scar you had on your cheek from when you fell on your face as a toddler, and didn’t make it completely obvious to everyone around him. As a rising star in the sports world, he was meant to keep his personal life secret, yet when it came to you, he couldn’t be bothered to hide what people insisted needed to be hidden.
Whenever you completed a trick, a well-placed Axel or something close to it, he’d skate over to you with his mouth hanging open in exaggerated awe; whenever you were walking next to him and he got a glimpse of you standing in a certain light, the shadows and contours of your body displayed just right; whenever you helped him with his stupid twelfth grade homework, explained functions to him like you were the older one—scenes and moments where all he could really do was lean back, drink you in, and say, “You’re amazing.”
Like when he tried to teach you how to play hockey on ice, and you skated circles around him. Granted, he was going easier on you than he would normal beginners, but you still played like you’d been in the game longer than him.
The rink was dark, only the harsh glow from the overhead lights rendering you sight. Music drifted from the speakers, something you’d picked out, or perhaps something you’d forced Yufan to listen to that he just got used to and started loving the way he loved you. Steadily, patiently, neverendingly. You swept past him, holding his stick—his newest one, the one that he hadn’t had to tape back together for this game, like the one he was playing with—in your hands as you dealt with the puck, shuffling it over the icy surface beneath your feet with grace, speed that he assumed came from your many years of training.
“Aaannnddd here she comes, the Polar Bears’ newest addition, sweeping the opposition off their feet with her mad skills!” you narrated, head down, trained on the puck. “She crosses over the, uh… the blue line, and passes by the opposing team’s very handsome defencemen before she comes to the goal to shoot—” you reared your stick back, the flat coming down to strike the puck straight into the open, unattended goal— “and score!”
Yufan watched as you skated around the rink, pumping your fists in the air and whisper-shouting praises to yourself, playing as the crowd, with sound effects and all. If, like the cartoons, there could’ve been hearts in his eyes, there would’ve been. “You’re doing so well, pretty girl,” he praised. “You’re basically a pro already.”
“I know that’s right,” you gloated, trying—and failing—to do a dorky little victory dance that made you look incredibly stupid. Really, genuinely like an idiot.
And Yufan loved every second of it.
Third, he was kind. Not just to you, or to his friends, but to everyone he felt, and even didn’t feel, deserved it. His family—the Chaos—were all kind, inviting people, enough so that you could pinpoint exactly where Yufan had gotten in from. Kind, in the sense that they were accepting of you, their son’s very different, very eccentric girlfriend. Kind, in the sense that they treated you as though you were one of their own, already married into the family. Kind, in the sense that it made your heart ache to wonder why such a family, such a boy, would ever have to struggle.
He introduced you to his family shortly after officially asking you to be his girlfriend. It was rather in order for him to, given the fact that you’d nearly crossed paths with them at the games of his you’d gone to. Your first meeting had been unexpected, because they’d anticipated for him to bring home a local girl, born and bred in Taipei with her own traditions and opinions to counter their own. What they hadn’t expected was you, just as local, with just as many traditions, but something that bound you to them in a way no one else would truly understand. Your bond, of foreigners who’d found their home, who’d lived their lives in it, yet felt like outsiders, felt like they had more to prove than was truly necessary.
Yufan was a lot like his mom, you realised one night, the first night he’d invited you over for dinner at his house. It was a small, cozy place, really only enough for three people, the architecture reminiscent of old-school Japanese homes with their sliding doors and cool wooden floors. You all sat around the dinner table, plates stacked up with all the different delights Yufan’s parents had made in preparation for your arrival—from his father’s side, dishes like beef brisket noodles, and his mother’s side, dishes like tom yum soup, and her famed pad kee mao.
She was Thai, you’d been told, and spoke with the sweetest accent curling around her words. Don’t be mistaken, she spoke rapid fire Mandarin while conversing with her husband, but there was something undeniably gentle, perhaps hesitant about the way she spoke, the way she enunciated. You wondered if you sounded like that to other people. She insisted that you just call her Mama, because, in her words, “Yufan probably won’t bring home another girl since we already like you so much.” However the comment terrified you, it was just as flattering.
Your boyfriend and his mother shared a sense of humour, loud and obvious where his father preferred to stay silent, and smile in gentle amusement. They spoke a lot—really, you thought that maybe you got in five or so words that night—and never ran out of things to comment on. It was like watching a real-life variety show.
They also shared a temperament, it seemed, their patience something fickle and short that could run out at any moment, and their gentleness neverending, not even when their partners were annoying the living daylights of them. The kind of temperament that had him flicking your temple after you’d said something stupid, that had his mother chiding her husband for his attitude. The kind of temperament that made him help you up from your seat and open doors for you, that had his mother taking her husband’s dishes and calling him handsome out of nowhere. The kind of temperament that made her expose his deepest secrets to you while priding himself on doing the same to you.
“You know, darling,” Mama began, turning to face you, “Yufan told us all about you before you even started dating.”
Your boyfriend’s face dropped, fell slack in shock. Conversely, a smile crept its way onto your face, and you looked at Mama Chao with newfound interest. “Oh, really?” you prompted, wanting nothing than to hear more about it.
She nodded sweetly, though you could see that familiar glimmer of mischief in her eyes, the one you so often saw in Yufan’s. “Oh, yes. I think it was in December, wasn’t it? that he came home with stories about you. I could imagine that he’s been rather taken with you since then.”
Yufan tried, “I wouldn’t exactly say—”
“I would,” his father spoke up, the first thing he’d said in ages. “I could see it in your eyes.”
Yufan, like his family, was kind in love, but incredibly, unrelentingly teasing all the same.
Once the new year rolled around, it was far more difficult to follow Shihan’s well-meaning advice and have fun. Not only because you had newfound obligations to your family, but because you had old obligations to your passion, old obligations that you’d put on the back burner since deciding that having fun was more important than committing to something that had cost your parents a fortune to finance.
Practice would need to become an even more regular feature in your daily life than it already had been. That meant no more cram school, and no more joint training sessions with Yufan. You’d have to commit, mind, body, and soul to this sport, to figure skating, or you’d have lost your window for everything. You’d go to competitions, and dominate as you had before, and that left little to no space for a social life.
When you first told him this, he was disappointed. Predictably so, because no teen boy liked having to spend less time with their girlfriend, especially one as dedicated to you as Yufan was. He didn’t talk to you for a few days following the announcement, but you didn’t really have time to coddle him into forgiving you. It was a harsh thought, but if Yufan wanted to end everything you had over something like this, he could go ahead and do it. You didn’t have time to stop him.
You went on a training camp in China without so much as a goodbye to him while he, similarly, travelled to Hong Kong with his team without looking back. After all, you had more important commitments now. Did this mean you wanted to break up? No. But if he was going to be a child about it, there was no need for you to be your usual understanding self (which has been hiding where, exactly?) and try to make amends.
You lasted precisely five days before you caved and called him. It had been a particularly rough day, with yours and the other skaters’ coaches having been unforgiving in their routines; you’d been up hellish heights in roller skates, done laps upon laps around the facility’s rink, and been pushed onto the ice in soccer cleats for whatever nonsense reason they could give you, probably something to do with strengthening your balance on the ice. Tensions had run high between the local and Taiwanese skaters, with you and your peers choosing to spend your evening hiding away in your shared dorms while the locals went and played a game of hockey in the rink… which was what led you to think of Yufan, and be unable to stop thinking of him until the next thing you knew, you were dialling his number and staring at your own reflection in the outgoing video call.
Yufan lasted approximately five seconds before he caved and answered your call. Like you, he’d been sentenced to two weeks of training hell, the likes of which were incomparable to even the worst torture anyone could survive. Mostly because he didn’t survive; not really, not when every one of his limbs ached and his joints screamed whenever he moved too quickly.
His face appeared on your screen like a blessing from the heavens, and all you could do was stare into his dark brown eyes too embarrassed to say anything. His hair had gotten a bit longer since you’d last seen him, his face a bit more mature. Oh, who were you kidding? He looked exactly the same, you were just being dramatic again. He was still your Yufan, all smooth, tanned skin, and plump, pink lips that you desperately wished you’d could kiss.
When you looked deep into his eyes, looked past the droopy, hooded lids, and the feigned indifference, you could see the same embarrassment you felt. But he still spoke first. “Hi, pretty girl.”
The sound of his voice, light and airy like you hadn’t heard in nearly a week, would’ve made your knees buckle if you hadn’t been sitting cross-legged on your bed, lifted a weight you hadn’t realised was resting on your shoulders until it dissipated. Like tension resolved without words. Like wounds eased with the wind. He still liked you. He still called you his pretty girl. He didn’t hate you.
“Hi, Yufan,” you said. Stupid, stupid you. Could you not come up with something better than that? ‘Hi’?! “How… how’s the training camp been?”
He nodded imperceptibly. “Fine. Or, well— no. Not fine. I hurt myself pretty bad during a scrimmage a while ago. But it’s whatever,” he dismissed. You noticed a bruise on his neck, and on his shoulder, where his loose sleeping shirt exposed the skin. “How’s it been in China?”
“Oh.” You gave him a meek shrug. “Not too bad. There are, um… some political tensions rising, but that’s about it.”
He managed a snicker. “Oh, yeah? The coaches fighting about the same old stuff?”
“Yep.” You smiled softly. Yufan thought you looked really pretty when you did that.
“…I saw you guys at the airport before we left,” he told you, ducking his head to avoid your gaze. His nose scrunched, and he added, “I wanted to say goodbye to you.”
Your face fell. “Oh. I’m— you could’ve, if you really wanted to. I would’ve let you.”
“No, it’s fine,” he assured you. “You needed your time to cool off. It just reminded me a little why I hate airports.”
“You do?” Still?
“Yeah.”
This was a conversation you’d had before, the feeling airports gave you. It first came up while you were laying together on the floor of your bedroom, staring at the glow in the dark stars pressed into the ceiling. You loved airports, because it meant you got to go somewhere new. Got to explore, got to see new places and learn new things. Yufan hated them, because,
“It reminds me that the people I love are leaving,” he said. “That… that I won’t be able to see them until they come back. Like my mom, when she goes to visit family in Thailand and I can’t come along. My dad, when he goes to Hong Kong for business and doesn’t come back for a month.” He paused, then, “Like you, when you go to Beijing or Seoul for competitions and I’m not sure when I’ll see you next.”
You sighed, the action more of a sad, rueful exhale. “Oh, Yufan…”
Another pause. Yufan looked into his phone camera, eyes on you still. You couldn’t detect any malice in his stare. Then, why would there be any? “Listen, pretty… I’m sorry about last week,” his soft voice came over the speaker. “About how I acted. That— it was stupid. I shouldn’t have behaved like that. It’s… your career is important. More important than I am.”
You frowned, your brow creasing as your heart ached. You were young, too young to be having these sorts of conversations. Too young to be talking of careers, of your importance in each other’s lives. You both understood that there was nothing to be done about it, but just for a moment, you had the fleeting thought that it wasn’t fair.
Fair. What an odd word to use, to try and define. Nothing was fair. Ever.
“That’s not true,” you said, “and you know it. I’ll always have time for you.” You wouldn’t. “If I don’t, I’ll make time.” Wrong again.
He smiled gently. “It’s alright, stupid.” It wasn’t. “I know why you need to focus more these days. I can wait.” He couldn’t. “Or, maybe… I could help you out a little?” When you raised a sceptical brow, he eagerly continued, “We don’t do cross-training anymore, which I get, but what if I help you with your routines, and stuff? I could help you practice choreography, and you wouldn’t need to do everything alone. I— the hockey season’s quieting down, anyway, so I’ll have plenty of free time.”
You paused. “You wouldn’t mind doing that for me?”
He rolled his eyes. “Baby, do I ever?”
You found yourself smiling, uncontrollable only in the fact that you physically couldn’t help reacting to his words the way you did. Couldn’t help accepting his proposal, missing the way the light in his eyes dimmed with every word, missing the way his smile seemed pained where yours wasn’t. Missing the way he looked at you, like you were something he’d already lost.
There were many technicalities that came with being a foreign athlete in Taiwan. There were many technicalities that came with being a foreign athlete anywhere, you were sure, but Taiwan was heart-piercingly clear in how it viewed non-natives. Though you could compete on an international scale, you were given a specific category to perform in. You didn’t represent Taiwan. You represented foreigners in Taiwan.
Which, considering the fact that you’d lived there for more than half of your life, considering the fact that you were a Taiwanese citizen, hurt. Especially considering the fact that there was little separating you from your local, same-aged peers besides a name that sounded a bit different, proportions that didn’t fit with what society deemed as appropriate for young girls your age.
It put you at odds with your friends, your fellow athletes; everyone you knew who trained the same way you did, did the same routines, faced the same struggles, but who could confidently say they represented their home country. Could you even say you had one, really, when you felt your birthplace was not yours to claim, and your home country separated you from its locals?
The Taiwan Figure Skating Championships were an annual competition that gathered several up and coming figure skaters to choose the lucky athlete that would represent Taiwan at the World Championships, and other such international competitions. It was an honour to any skater who entered to even make the top three, but that wasn’t what you were aiming for.
You’d entered your name with an intention, not hidden or concealed in any way. You’d filled out the application with confidence, confidence that they’d look at your portfolio, your history, your skill set, and consider you as one of the few options that would be able to compete.
You’d sat at your desk at home, finger hovering over the email you’d received in the hours after you returned from cram school, filled with anticipation and fear and impending regret as you contemplated the results to come.
Did you even open the email? Did you brace yourself, for equal parts victory and failure, or did you just throw your hat in and leave it unopened, convinced you didn’t deserve a spot, anyway?
I mean, think about it this way. You’d been training for Nationals before registrations had even opened. Even before you’d met Yufan in Beijing all those months ago, you’d already choreographed and practiced both your short program and free skate. You’d spent all your time in the off-season following the previous Championships training, and exercising, and choreographing, and slaving away in that dark, lonely rink. All that time would, if you didn’t open the email and face your fate, be wasted.
But all that time would also, if you hadn’t been accepted, be wasted, anyway. So, how exactly were you supposed to choose what to do next?
It seemed you didn’t need to, because one of your parents would. You’d been sitting at your desk, your mother and your stepfather, Chihming, crouching anxiously behind you. Shihan and Peiling were waiting for you over the phone, and Yufan had already sent you his own words of encouragement.
雨 you’re going to do great, pretty girl
i just know it
After five minutes of you deliberating, procrastinating, prolonging—every word that could describe you doing everything in your power to avoid opening the email, the pressure seemed to become too much for Chihming, so he reached forward and took over. Predictably, chaos erupted. Your mother yelled for him to back off, while Peiling and Shihan screamed confused obscenities at the ruckus, and all you could do was smack a hand over your eyes so you wouldn’t have to face the inevitable rejection.
Silence. Then, Chihming tapped you on the shoulder. With great reluctance, you opened your fingers just that little bit to read the opening lines.
Dear athlete, we are pleased to inform you that you have been accepted to compete at the—
“Holy crap!” you exclaimed, your voice rising impossibly high.
Your mother, bless her soul, frowned in confusion. “What?”
Chihming pointed frantically at the screen. “Look!”
She deadpanned. “I can’t read that, peh bak.”
“Neither can we!” Peiling and Shihan chimed in.
“I got in,” you said quickly. Then, jumping up from your seat, effectively clearing the space as your mother and stepfather took a careful step back, “I got in! Oh, my GOD, I got in! I’m competing at Nationals! I’m gonna be a star!”
And that’s where things went south.
Yufan was someone who was used to pretending that everything was fine when his life was falling apart. Perhaps it was an unfortunate side effect that came with being an only child to immigrants, always putting on a brave face for your parents in times of trouble, which later became putting on a brave face in front of friends, other family members, teammates, and eventually, your neurotic girlfriend.
You’d been going at it for hours by the time he arrived at the rink to help you, just like he’d promised he would. You, however, were not supposed to have been busy when he came, and yet here you were, spent and not looking like you were going to give up whatever you were trying to perfect very soon. It was something he noticed when you trained together; your obsession with perfection, almost comparable to his.
Your approaches differed in two main ways. Where Yufan became unhealthily devoted to whichever task he’d set out to do, you threw yourself into the process blind, unsure of whether you’d emerge in one piece. Where he was cold and calculated, you were hot and reckless, not stopping until your limbs trembled and you couldn’t see straight. Both of you felt things intensely, but there was something about the way your emotions took hold of you, kept you in a vice, that Yufan couldn’t imagine feeling like that, ever.
From what he’d seen, though, it was your approach that got you places. Your sheer dedication not to routine, but to repetition was something to behold. If you couldn’t do something, you’d do it over and over and over again until the soles of your skates were stained with blood and you had no choice but to take a step back. Between the two of you, you were the one who consistently placed first in your competitions, you were the one who was on her way to Nationals. You weren’t the one who was tied to a shitty team and an even shittier self worth hiding behind layers of sarcasm and feigned charm. You were yourself, through and through.
And he wouldn’t be lying if he said he was a little jealous of it. Of you. Not in a predatory, competitive sense, in a way that meant he wanted exactly what you had, felt entitled to it. No, rather, in a way that had him wishing he had your confidence, your self-assurance in your skill. He didn’t have that, and it showed in his games.
Which is where the saving face came in. He’d come straight from a gruelling practice that had ended in Coach Chen asking him an impossible question, weathered face contorted with something like hopeless rage. Do you even want to be here? When you play like that, who could be able to tell that you’re passionate about all of this, and not just wasting our time?
But that didn’t matter. Not now, anyway, when he had you in front of him. You, his wonderful girlfriend, who was not afraid to get snippy with him, who hugged him whenever he got off the ice after a game, who said he was doing just fine for himself, and that that was all you really cared about. You, his talented girlfriend, who was on her way to Nationals, World Championships, and who knows what else, who was better than he was in any regard, who was leaving him behind in Taiwan to become an international star. Who deserved nothing less from the world.
You didn’t notice him at first, and he wasn’t surprised, with how lost you were in your own dark little world. Music blasted from the speakers—probably something from that one English indie band you never stopped talking about. Peiling was sitting in the stands, eyes narrowed as if in disapproval. Yufan knew her to be quite the strict coach; perhaps not as bad as Coach Chen, but certainly a nightmare in her own right. In her hands she held a clipboard, and when Yufan sat down next to her to pull on his skates, she angled it away from him. Not that he was planning on looking, but now that she’d hidden it, he felt his suspicion growing.
He knew she didn’t like him—for whatever reason, he wasn’t too sure. Maybe she didn’t like hockey players. Actually, now that he thought of it, remembered how she and Coach Chen had beheld one another with more scepticism than was necessary when they first met, that seemed to be the exact case.
She didn’t greet him, rather opening the conversation with, “You’re here to help again, I assume.”
The sound of your skates sliding against the ice drifted through the air. “I am,” he confirmed.
She hummed, clearly still unhappy.
Yufan pulled his laces tighter, extending his leg further from him to get the most out of it. He said, without looking her in the eye, “Something tells me you don’t like me, shifu. Why?”
She tsked, almost as if she didn’t want to respond. Then, “Hockey men are bad luck for my girls. My first student had a boyfriend just like you, and he almost ruined her career.”
Well, that was one reference point, the audience might be thinking. Right? That hypothesis is totally flawed. “Trust me, I want nothing more than to help,” he said earnestly, because it was the truth. He wanted you to succeed, and if he could make your path to destiny more bearable, why wouldn’t he?
“Hmph.” She glanced at him, through the corner of her eye. “We’ll see about that.” Before he could retort, or dig himself deeper into the hole she’d made for him, a sharp sound echoed from inside the rink, the sound of skin and bone thumping against the ice. Peiling turned, eyes narrowing as she rushed to the barrier, shouting, “What happened? What did you do now?”
“Nothing,” you wheezed, holding up a hand to signal that you were alright. “Just a triple toe loop gone wrong.”
Yufan shook his head in mild amusement, opening up the barrier door and getting onto the ice after following after your coach, skating over to where you’d fallen to help you up. “You alright?” he asked, glancing at you with badly disguised concern. “That looked pretty bad.”
“It’s fine,” you assured him, squeezing your hip—where he’d assumed you’d fallen. “I’ll probably just have some bruising; it’s nothing that’ll keep me from practicing. Speaking of…”
And so, the rest of his afternoon was lost to your training. You went over your programs, the moves you’d planned, the music you’d picked out. For your short program, you were planning on a triple flip and toeloop, a double Axel, fly camel spin, triple Lutz, change combo spin, step sequence, and a layback spin, all to On the hills of Manchuria. You flowed through the practice session easily, moving through the routine, through the music, as if it were second nature.
Your free skate was a different monster. Triple Lutz, triple loop, triple toeloop, and double Axel that transitioned into a quadruple fly camel spin, a choreography sequence that made way for another double Axel, single Euler, and triple flip. Again, triple Lutz, double toeloop, triple flip, quadruple layback spin, and at the swell of the music, a quadruple Salchow. You’d finish with a triple step sequence, and a quadruple change combo spin, to none other than a shortened version of Tchaikovsky’s The Sleeping Beauty’s Valse.
Only two other female figure skaters in the history of the sport had ever attempted a quad Salchow—while the jump on its own was one of the easier ones, completing it in four rotations was virtually unheard of. For you to attempt it at your age… It was a high-risk, high-reward move. You’d been practicing it since you were introduced to quads, you’d told him, though there was something about the Salchow, some sort of mental or physical block, that had made it nearly impossible for you to complete twice in a row.
You went through the motions of your free skate, Yufan keeping a reasonable distance behind you as you circled the ice. “Tell me if you need me,” he’d told you, though he knew you didn’t. “Just look back, and I’ll be there.”
You got all the way through the first half without a hitch; after your closing move, you landed on your left foot, rushing backwards with your arms spread, body swaying to the music as if you were dancing. Yufan watched as you bowed, lifted yourself up in one languid movement, gliding across the ice in one consuming sweep. You turned, readying yourself for the triple Lutz; as you spun through the air, thinking of your next move, Yufan found himself entranced with the way you landed and swept yourself straight into it, placing the pick of your skate behind the other, vaulting yourself into the air. You wheeled around, legs moving back and forth over the smooth surface beneath you, before twisting to launch yourself into a triple flip, sweeping your leg out from behind you and spinning like a top, your hands coming up from behind you, above you, around you, moving in time to the up and down of the string instruments; the jaunty tune playing perfectly to your ministrations.
For a moment you didn’t look like a girl who had too many ear piercings or an attitude; you looked like a proper lady, who spoke clearly and gently. It was odd, seeing that part of your personality, even though Yufan knew it was there. The music only added to your grace, to your impossible elegance. The violins and piccolos all layered over one another… it felt like falling in love.
That was when you stumbled, just as you were about to take off, your arms braced around your front and all. You cursed as you landed oddly, skidding to a halt at the edge of the rink. Yufan followed soon after, stopping a few metres behind you, waiting for you to say something.
You took a moment to regain your composure, before you turned to the barrier, where Peiling had been observing your practice with a stony face. You gave her a thumbs up, silver rings glimmering in the harsh rink light, and said, “I’ll try again!”
And, boy, did you try. And try, and try, and try, until the sun had set and there was no way within human limits that you were not exhausted yet. The music did not stop, not Tchaikovsky, nor Ilya Shatrov, and neither did you. It got to the point where you’d done so many loops, so many spins, that Yufan was beginning to get nauseous on your behalf. When you dared to try and practice your quad Salchow a fourth time, and doing so by starting your routine from the very top, Yufan skated towards you, laying gentle, sure hands on your shoulders, and looking into your eyes with the intensity of a man who wanted to be in bed yesterday.
“Pretty girl,” he said, voice hushed from exhaustion. “Babe. Baby. Ice Queen. Please… no more.”
You exhaled, struggling to catch your breath. Still, you didn’t seem to catch on to the signals your own body was sending your way. “You can go home if you’d like, Yu. I didn’t expect you to stay all the way through for all of my practices.”
He chuckled breathlessly, because who were you to be so disgustingly devoted to your work? “That’s not what I’m talking about. I’m talking about the fact that we have been here for hours, and that, I’m sure, your feet are going to start bleeding if you don’t go home in the next thirty seconds.”
You hesitated, eyes flicking to the ground. “But… I feel like I could practice my Salchow more.”
He raised a brow. “How long has it been part of your routine?”
“Since I was introduced to quads,” you answered immediately, the words sending you into inspirational autopilot.
“Right. And you’ve been practicing it for just as long. So, what I’m trying to say is,” he added, because he noticed you wanting to protest yet again, “you’ve got this.”
“What if I don’t?” you asked. “What if I try it, and I fail?” Your eyes widened, pupils shaking as more questions piled into your mind. “What if I fall in front of all of those judges, and I have to go into early retirement from the embarrassment? Wh— what if I make a complete fool of myself in front of the whole panel of judges?” You huffed, growing agitated in the face of his silence. “Why aren’t you saying anything? Yu—”
“You’re a talented girl,” Yufan interrupted firmly, giving your shoulders a little shake. “I know that. You know that. Everyone knows that. But what you need to realise is that whether or not you succeed, whether or not you become the star you want to be, is completely up to you. And you know what you’re doing.”
There was something about you, standing in front of him, full cheeks and dreamy eyes, that made his heart hurt. That made him wonder where all his talent, all his tact had gone. He’d been on top of the world when he met you, and since then, he’d just been going backwards. You, however, did the opposite. You’d been placing second and winning silver when you met him, and since meeting him, you’d been invited to prestigious events, been on training camps out of the country, gone further than he ever would.
It wasn’t fair. That you had the ability to work as hard as you did, but once Yufan reached a certain point, his body simply refused to cooperate. Why couldn’t he be pushed to your extremes, the kind that kept your posture upright, that kept your body fit, that kept your mind sharp? Why couldn’t he be more like you?
“Thanks, Yufan, but will all due respect, I think I know my abilities better than you do,” you murmured, taking a step back from him.
Okay. What the fuck? “All I said was that you know what you’re doing,” he pointed out lightly. “Wouldn’t you agree?”
You didn’t take it as lightly as he presented it. “My technique has been slipping for the past week, so, no, I wouldn’t. I’ve still got a lot of headway to make, and your patronising comments aren’t helping in the least.”
“I’m not trying to be patronising,” he laughed, in growing disbelief.
“Oh, really? Whether or not I succeed is completely up to me? I already know that, genius, and you saying anything about it isn’t going to help me become a better skater,” you snapped.
Yufan could see in your eyes that you were tired. That’s why you were being like this. Difficult. Yet still, he bothered to respond like you were in your right mind, “I’m just lifting you up a little, babe. It’s not a big deal. You should be more confident in yourself. A quad Salchow should be nothing to you.”
That was not the right thing to say.
“Nothing?” you spat. “Only two women in the history of figure skating have executed it in competition, and it should be nothing for me?”
He tried, “That’s not what I meant—”
“How could you know what you’re talking about?! You’re a hockey player, Yufan. We’re not on the same level.”
Silence. He took a step back, face hardening with something like anger. A deep, shuddering breath escaped his lips, and when he looked up at you, his jaw twitched. “You don’t mean that,” he tried lowly.
You stubbornly stood your ground. “Don’t I?”
He didn’t want to believe you did, no. Not when he’d spent so much time with you by his side, helping him, teasing him, loving him. How heartbroken was he supposed to be if it turned out to be the truth? If the girl he’d unknowingly idolised for so long didn’t even respect him enough to hear him out on something he was so sure of?
Then again, why would he have to compromise himself for you when you’d shown time and time again you wouldn’t ever do the same for him. Why waste that time? Why take that risk? He chuckled, the sound dark and brittle, shrugging. “I don’t need this,” he announced. “You don’t want me here? I’ll leave. I’ll leave you to roll in self-pity, because you seem to like your own company a hell of a lot more than mine.”
You froze. For a moment, he could imagine traces of disappointment in your features. But just like the seasons, just like your love, it was gone as soon as it had come. “Door’s that way,” you chirped, indicating the exit.
“Right,” he said. And then he was gone. You were alone all over again.
As you watched him leave, something in your gut told you to take off your skates and run after him. Fix things, tell him you were sorry about what you said. You didn’t think he was stupid, or worth less just because he played a different sport. Why would you even say something like that? There were a million reasons, none of them good enough for Yufan. It wasn’t the heat of the moment; it wasn’t stress, or fatigue, or fear. It was nothing more than your own selfishness, your own ill temper.
You sighed, shoulders sagging as you reluctantly threw in the towel and called it a night, skating to the edge of the barrier and opening up the short swing door, climbing off the ice with wobbly legs.
THAT SAME NIGHT
The locker room was, from what you could see after practice, deserted. Peiling hadn’t been in the stands for a while, though when you’d jogged outside the check if she’d gone home for the night, you came face to face with her beat up Prius in the parking lot; she was probably still in the rink somewhere, out of the sight from you, doing her odd coach things.
You strode back inside and to the locker rooms, tugging at the next of your top, which had begun to feel far too tight near the end of training. You approached the door, which was open only a crack, stopping once you heard voices, the sound of shoes pacing around the room. It sounded like someone, a woman and a man, talking over the phone.
“I don’t understand what you mean by that,” the woman said, disbelief staining her words. Your blood ran cold when you recognised Peiling’s voice. “She qualified just like everyone else.”
“But the board are looking to review her qualifications,” the man replied calmly. He sounded old, perhaps your grandparents’ age, or a bit younger, if you had to think about it. “We’ve considered that perhaps some of her competition points could be below the standard for skaters of her… her origin.”
“I cannot believe my ears. You are insinuating that because she is a foreigner, she cannot represent Taiwan, when all of our country’s biggest stars in this sport were born overseas?!”
“That is a different case altogether—”
“No, it is not. I built her up from nothing. I made her the skater that qualified, and I say she’s just as good as anyone else in her position, if not better, because she has to deal with old-fashioned folks like you constantly bringing her down. She deserves just as much as anyone else to represent her home country.”
“Not when the topic of foreign representatives has already stirred up controversy and feelings of inferiority in local skaters.”
A beat. Then, “She’s going to compete at Nationals, whether you like it or not. Got it? I didn’t waste ten years of my life on this girl for you to tell me she can’t perform.”
What a nice thing to hear from your coach.
You woke up on the morning of Nationals with a knot in your stomach. Everything felt off, from the moment you stepped out of bed and onto a floor that was too cold to bear, to the moment your parents drove you to the rink, and you met Peiling at the entrance, the sun looking wrong in the sky; its rays too pale, its heat too sparse.
In all regards, you looked ready. You were dressed in your costume—a glittering black ensemble that spoke of maturity and grace you didn’t feel you possessed, hair neat and completely out of the way. There was not a rip or a draw in your stockings, the blades of your skates shimmered as you hoisted them up to show to her, but nothing felt right.
Peiling grasped your shoulders, looking into your eyes with nothing but pride swimming in hers. Pride, and expectation. The neverending, unrelenting expectation of someone who had waged all their money, time, and dignity on a young girl with a dream. How cruel of her to believe in you.
Your parents made their way to the stands, but not without your mother crouching down to press a kiss to your forehead, Chihming giving you a gentle pat on the back, their actions speaking louder than words ever would. Good luck, their smiles seemed to say. We believe in you. You’re going to do great. Don’t mess this up. Please don’t mess this up. Shihan had texted you earlier that she’d already saved seats for your parents and for Yufan, right next to where she’d booked her seat, proclaiming having gotten the best view of the rink. Their eyes would be on you the whole time, she boasted. They’d get to see everything.
The locker room was eerily quiet, and at the very same time, a cacophony played over and over in your ears. Something mechanical—a fan, or a massage gun—buzzed to the right of you; someone knocked their skate guards against the floor as the hard plastic slipped out of their hands; someone was talking over the phone; someone else was praying. And you sat on your designated bench, your shaking legs braced in front of you.
Yufan hadn’t spoken to you all morning, save for the minimal texts you’d exchanged when talking about his and his parents’ seating arrangements. He’d barely even spoken to you since your last training session, since you’d stormed out on him and told him that he didn’t know what he was talking about. Just thinking about it made your insides churn. You were wrong for that. So, so wrong. You’d agreed, however, before all of that had happened, to meet each other, just for a moment, in the locker room, long before you were due to start. You hadn’t spoken of a time—you’d just told him that he could come whenever he wanted to. You felt now like you shouldn’t have told him to come at all.
You didn’t hear the door open, and only when a pair of familiar sneakers came into view did you realise that Yufan was already there. No avoiding him now. You looked up at him, eyes settling on his face—pretty, angered, worried—and stood up. He didn’t greet you; he knew he didn’t need to. You’d say all you needed to say right now, as you stood in front of him, if you were brave enough.
“I hope you and your parents didn’t have any problems finding your seats,” you began. He simply nodded. Somewhere in the far corners of the room, you could hear Peiling speaking with one of the other skaters’ coaches.
“She deserves just as much as anyone else to represent her home country.”
Yufan looked at you—really looked at you, attention as unwavering as his affection had been. “We didn’t,” he said. He paused then, though a silent question hung in the air. Why am I even here? Good question. Why was he even there? When you’d already told him that he didn’t know what he was doing, that he wouldn’t be useful to you going forward? If you wouldn’t, he’d bite. “Is there something you need to tell me?”
“Not when the topic of foreign representatives has already stirred up controversy and feelings of inferiority in local skaters.”
If you were brave enough, you could tell him. Tell him exactly what was on your mind. If you were brave enough. If only you were brave enough. “I’m thinking of cutting the quadruple Salchow from my routine.”
You’d wondered what his reaction would be to that in the days leading up to the competition. Would he be disappointed? Would he sigh to himself and say he’d expected you to chicken out? Would he be relieved? Would he say he was hoping that you would because of how dangerous it was, given the fact that you’d only accomplished it a handful of times? Would he be indifferent? Would he act normally and say what you did in your routine was your business, he was merely a spectator? Nothing you thought could’ve prepared you for the real thing.
“What do you mean?” he asked, brow furrowing in genuine confusion. “Wh— what do you mean you’re dropping it?”
“Well, I figured that since I’d only actually executed it a few times, I shouldn’t necessarily take the risk of trying it right now,” you explained. “I rather wouldn’t do it than do it badly.”
“You can’t do it badly, though,” he pointed out. “You’ve practiced it enough times to be able to do it right.”
“Okay, I’m just not confident enough just yet,” you replied, words quick. “I don’t want to take that risk.”
“How can you not be confident enough when you’ve been practicing this routine for years?” he asked, and the words came out harder than he’d meant for them to. Or maybe they landed just as he’d intended. “This sport is all about risks.”
You paused. “Figure skating isn’t the same as hockey, Yufan. I can’t just get onto the ice and do as I please. I need to be fully assured that I’m capable—”
“The thing is, you are,” he interrupted, “and you’re being ridiculous by suggesting that you aren’t.”
“Don’t interrupt me,” you said sternly. “Losing confidence is normal in this sport, okay? I’m not like you.”
He narrowed his eyes, mouth set in a thin line of question. “You know what? I’m not even going to ask you to expand on that disgustingly elitist comment, because I’m more concerned with the fact that, all of a sudden, you can’t do what you’ve been doing for the past ten years.”
“That’s not what I’m saying,” you tried.
“Well, it sounds a lot like it! It doesn’t matter how many times you’ve executed it perfectly; you’ve been practicing the quad Salchow for years. You’re thinking too much about this. Just go out there and do your thing, and you’ll see, you’re capable.”
“Yufan, I’m trying to tell you that I’m not, okay? I can’t do it! It’s not me!”
“What is ‘you’, then? What are you, who are you, if not someone who can do this? When did you become such a coward?!”
Silence.
You took a step back. “Excuse me?”
“I asked, since when were you such a coward?” he repeated, unapologetic. “Since when do you think too much and act too little?”
“I’m not a coward,” you spat.
“Prove it,” he challenged. “Trust your skill and do the quad Salchow when it’s your time to perform.”
“That’s not how these things work, okay? I can’t just make up my mind not to do something, and change plans the day of a competition! It’s not like—”
“I swear to God, if you say something about hockey again—”
“You know what?” you asked, voice raising. “I’ll say what I want about your stupid sport. You don’t get to belittle me and call me names just because it’s what you’re used to as an athlete. If you want to treat me like one of your teammates, you can leave.”
He scoffed. “What, you’re telling me to leave because you can’t handle tough love?”
“This is all tough!” you said. “Where’s the love?” You shook your head, and when your eyes landed on him again, you beheld him with something akin to acceptance. “Get out.”
This seemed to sober him up. “What?”
“I said, get out. Walk away, and don’t look back. I wouldn’t want you to. We’re done.”
The first thing you noticed about the rink at Nationals was how bright it was. All ice skating rinks had to, according to the rules of the sport, be well-lit so as to ensure safe skating for any athlete, but there was something different about a rink that hosted the country’s best skaters. The ice was whiter than white, cold, and crisp, with the detailed swirls and twirls of blades engraved into its surface. The crowd was massive, a darkened mob surrounding your stage, the lights nearly blinding as you stepped onto the ice for your warmups.
You shared the space with one other skater; a girl by the name of Nana, who looked more familiar than she should have. She skated well, though you noted a slight hesitation in her movements whenever she readied herself for a spin. You failed to notice the tremble in your own hands, those moments between loops and twirls where you could’ve stumbled.
Your short program was a success, racking up a total of 78.45 points—42.43 in technical elements, and 36.02 in components. You’d done as you were told and moved in time with the music, losing yourself in the unfamiliarity of the sounds, of the sort of song you could only bear when your career depended on it. You were serenaded with a shower of gifts; flowers, teddy bears, and the approving nod of Peiling on the other side of the ice. Your parents cheered for you, whistling and clapping and waving the poster they’d made specially for you.
You’d smiled from your spot on the ice, grinning like a madwoman in the midst of all the praise, your chest rising and falling with rapid breaths as you tried to compose yourself. Your makeup, bold and bright and completely unlike you, glimmered under the lights, shimmering like the mist that separated fantasy from reality.
When you glanced at the leaderboard, you saw that you’d come steadily in second. You couldn’t reason that it was only because all the other skaters before you had fallen, or because they hadn’t executed their moves correctly. You had faith that you would win. You had to. Otherwise, what would it all have been for?
There was a small intermission that allowed you to catch your breath, while Peiling reviewed your routine from where she was seated next to you. She didn’t look at you as she spoke, rather at the judge’s panel, where she glared at one of the older men sitting at the very end. “You’ve dropped the quad Salchow from your routine, correct?” she asked.
“That’s what I’d planned on,” you said, voice trembling.
She hummed. “Mm. Alright. Then just make sure you do your other moves well enough. Skate like you didn’t even need it in the first place.”
You nodded. “I’ll try.”
“You won’t try,” she said. “You will.”
And before you could delay fate, it was your time.
You stepped onto the ice with shaking legs, your fingers trembling from where they rested at your sides as you glided to the centre, twisting and turning your body every which way to loosen your aching muscles. You looked down at your leading leg, exhaling deeply. Bruises and sore spots littered the joint, and surely many other areas of your body. You could barely hold yourself together.
Your routine started off well, with you sliding backwards across the ice, bracing yourself, lifting your arms in a gentle dance. You took a deep bow, twisting yourself up into the air, spinning once, twice, thrice, blades barely touching the ice before you were back in the air again, landing with little effort. After that, a backwards glide that ended in you pole vaulting into the air, assisted by the pick of your skate. The music drifted through the air, the bass reverberating through your body. You pulled your lips into a tight smile, facing the crowd as you rushed forward, lifting your knee for a double Axel. You turned, once, twice, and stuck the landing.
You moved easily through the single Euler and triple flip, and the crowd cheered briefly when you executed a particularly impressive triple Lutz. As you moved across the ice, your blades scraping against its freezing surface, you counted down in your head the numbers you had left before you could be blessed with a completed routine—double toeloop, triple flip, quadruple layback spin, and…
You hoped no one noticed you falter as your brain listed the quadruple Salchow as an automatic addition. Did you do it, and surprise everyone with an unexpected twist, or did you continue as everyone had anticipated, and complete your routine without taking any real risks?
You turned, readying yourself for the quadruple Salchow. As you bent your knee, arms lowering with the rest of you, you thought of Miki Ando. The first and only girl to land the move you were about to attempt. She’d been your age, performing on a much higher level, for a much larger audience. How were you supposed to feel, knowing that the one move you’d spent your entire career practicing had already been done before? Maybe Yufan was right. Maybe you did think too much, act too little. Maybe you were a coward. You sucked in a sharp breath as you flew into the air, the world around you spinning like a top. One, two, three…
Four. Your right foot made contact with the ice, its cold, hard, unforgiving surface. And then you spun again.
Except, you weren’t supposed to. You were supposed to glide seamlessly back into your routine, basking in the audience’s applause. Instead you turned, and now the ground was rapidly approaching.
Snap!
When people get injured, they often describe it as an out of body experience. Something that seems faraway, as if they weren’t present to witness the moment. Your injury was nothing like that.
You cried out as you came down, your shoulder hitting the ice. The pain travelled up at an alarming rate, the joint becoming dead weight.
In an instant, your senses sharpened. You became hyperaware of the pain shooting up your arm, not stopping until it seemed to throb inside your head, your temples burning with the ache. Of the harsh lights cast above you, next to you, behind you, shining even from under your closed eyelids. You heard people, voices cutting through the sound of your own ragged breathing. Skates rushing along the ice, faint sharp lines barely visible through your narrowed eyes. You weren’t sure if you screamed, or if you stayed silent. If you cried, or if the wetness on your cheeks was because of something else.
Whenever you finished a program, there was a moment of silence before the audience erupted in cheers. Before the bouquets were thrown and your name was called, over and over until even you believed you’d made first place. That never came. Instead, you were faced with the deafening silence of a shocked crowd, covering their mouths in horror.
And all you could do was stand up.
The medics tried to help you, but you brushed them off, shakily getting to your feet. You knew what happened next—you’d smile, bow to the crowd while wiping your tears, and they’d all let out a sigh of relief as you stepped off the ice and took a seat. That didn’t happen. Because when you attempted to bow, it was as if every muscle in your body screamed for you to stop, for you to stand upright and try to support your shoulder. It sagged forward, the bone bent at an odd angle.
“Fuck,” you swore, the word out before you could stop it. A medic rushed forward, and this time, you didn’t refuse his help. You let him, and several others of the medical team, help you off the ice, their hands braced firmly against your back.
Peiling was waiting for you at the barrier, her hands desperately grabbing onto you as she half hoisted you up, lifting your numb legs to sheathe your skates. You let her guide you to the kiss and cry, where you sat down with a heavy heart and medics fussed over you until they reached their final conclusion.
They said many things as they examined you; your body, your current state of being. A shock, murmured one, testing to see if she could pop the joint back into place. You teared up and told her to stop, and she did. Totally unexpected, murmured another in Hokkien. Other words and terms were also thrown around. Bad injury. Bone. Joint. Fractured collarbone. Broken clavicle.
“We’ll have to take her to the hospital,” said one of the medics, an older woman who turned to Peiling as she spoke. As if you weren’t even there. “This fracture requires immediate intervention that we can’t give her.”
“You think?” asked the younger man, the one who spoke Hokkien. Probably a medical student. Not much older than you.
“I know,” she said gravely.
All your coach did—all she could do—was nod, accepting the fate that had befallen you. There was nothing to be done about your routine, or what of it you were able to perform. As they carried you out of the rink on a stretcher they’d practically pushed you onto, you realised that you wouldn’t win. An incomplete set didn’t even get you second place. You’d done all that, all those jumps, those twirls, those nights you’d spent at the rink instead of being with your family, those fights you had with Yufan about your courage—all of it in vain.
Your parents made an appearance after all was said and done, when the ambulance had been called and activity in the competition had been halted as thousands of people awaited the outcome of your failure. Just before you were forcefully helped onto the stretcher, they came barrelling through a crowd of security guards, shouting obscenities as they tried to hold them back.
“Let them through,” Peiling barked. “They’re family.”
Your mother rushed to your side, taking your cold face in her warm palms. “Are you alright? Oh, my darling—what’s… what happened?” Then, before you could respond, to the young medic who’d practically carried you off the ice, “Will she be alright?”
He hesitated. “She—”
“My collarbone,” you said, your voice an unfamiliar drawl, a moan of pain, “clavicle. It’s broken.”
She gasped, Chihming’s hands coming up to keep her steady as she began to cry. You felt pity for her, you really did, but when you were the one who’d been injured, a wailing mother was not exactly a nice backing track to your pain.
You waved a hand in Peiling’s direction, and she seemed to understand your signal. Please make it stop. I love her, but please make it stop. Chihming did, as well, because when your coach approached your parents to gently urge your mother into silence, he just nodded and said he’d bring their car around so they could follow the ambulance to the hospital.
“Let us know if anything else happens,” he said, both to you and to Peiling. “Drive safe.”
Then came Shihan, her beautiful face taut with worry and panic. You’d been carried out by that time, and she’d jogged after the medics before you could get to the ambulance from where it wailed on the pavement outside the rink. You could hear the music of another skater’s set through the faint thrum of your own heartbeat. No surprise, they continued despite your absence. That was one of the things you’d loved about figure skating; no matter how bad something seems, no matter how many hits you take, you’d always have to get back up and let the show go on.
And your show couldn’t go on for much longer.
“Are you okay?” was the first thing she asked after pushing herself past the medics crowding you. Her hair fell over her shoulders in inky cascades. “Are you alright? Don’t tell me it’s a broken shoulder, or— or something bad like—”
“Han-eh,” Peiling said, voice low. “Calm down. We’re taking her to the hospital now. She’ll be fine.”
She glanced at your coach, then back at you, taking in the way your face was contorted in pain, the tears streaming down your cheeks. She reached up to wipe them away, saying, “Your— Yufan’s looking for you. He’s here. He wants to see you.”
Then a call of your name, in that sweet, high voice that once warmed you to your core, distressed and frenzied with fear. Now all it did was make your blood run cold.
You grabbed at Shihan’s wrist, shaking your head. You wanted to speak, wanted to scream, Get him away, but all you could do was say, with more acidity than she deserved, “I don’t want to see him.” Desperately, spitefully.
Her brow creased in confusion. Right. She wasn’t there, before the competition. “Not now?”
“Not ever,” you whispered.
It was all a disparaging blur once the ambulance doors shut. You were escorted to the emergency room, where you were immediately assisted by a doctor who spoke like the Osaka businessmen you’d met on training camps in Japan. Your parents stood by your side, each clutching one hand, braced for the worst despite already learning what everyone else knew of your injury.
The elderly medic had been correct in her assumption that you’d suffered a broken collarbone. The bone had shifted, nearly shattered during your fall. Your doctor told you that you’d been unlucky to fall from such a height, at such an impossible speed. You could only grimace as he pulled up an X-ray of your front, talking about the possible paths you could take in your healing. If you were careful, and took it terribly seriously not to move too much, and received a plentiful blessing from the gods, it would heal completely in four to six months.
Half a year. That was how long you’d have to wait to start training seriously again—who knew about how long it would take you to be restored to your full strength and health. Waste. Waste. Waste. That was all you could hear. Failure. The end of times. The worst of the worst.
You cried more times than you’d like to admit. Grieved harder for something you weren’t even sure was lost yet, that you were sure you’d never be able to get back. Your doctor merely glanced at you like you were something to pity, some sort of distressed child that was crying over nothing. Peiling had disappeared out of the room somewhere in the midst of everything, keeping her phone tucked between her shoulder and her cheek as she answered a call. Shihan sat at the edge of your bed while the doctor walked out, your parents following behind him.
She crossed her legs easily over the thin mattress, observing your surroundings. You’d been hastily given a scratchy grey blanket to wear over your costume, and were constantly readjusting your posture, frowning in discomfort. The emergency room was busy, despite it being the middle of the day. Perhaps more peoples’ lives fell apart than you thought every day. Perhaps you’d just never noticed them because you’d never been one of them. Conversations floated through the air, bits and pieces of patients’ personal lives revealed to you, laid bare under the flickering fluorescent lights.
When she spoke, she didn’t say what people had been telling you since you’d arrived. She didn’t tell you that everything was going to be alright, that you were sure to make a speedy recovery if you just rested enough and listened to the doctor’s advice. She didn’t hastily assure you that your career was over, or that this would all be a wonderful story to tell when you won the Olympics, or some anxious, sentimental drivel like that. She said,
“I used to have a Yufan, you know.”
Her tone of voice—soft, saccharine, thick with emotion—caught you off guard. She’d never sounded like that before. “What?” you asked, narrowing your eyes, swollen from crying.
“Yeah. He was a hockey player, and he was a year or two older than me. We met when I was around your age,” she told you. “He’d always let me sit at the very front of his games, and even gave me a signed hockey stick.” She frowned, smiling. “Not that I know who Wayne Gretzky is, but he did. And he cared, so I did, too.” She tilted her head, nodding to you, “Then we broke up… right before one of my competitions. That’s where I got this.”
She pulled up the left leg of her jeans, where you could see stitch marks on her knee, the skin raised where she’d been cut. Your eyes widened. When you glanced up at her, her gaze was still focused on the spot. “Is this why you took that break a few years ago? Because you got hurt?”
“Mm,” she nodded. “It took me months to even get back on the ice. Peiling’s hated hockey players ever since.”
Perhaps it was that single, throwaway comment, or the pain, or the absurdity of it all, but you laughed. For the first time in a while, you laughed; genuinely, and without scorn. It was a light sound, unfamiliar in how loud it was, how it tore through your body like it had been waiting to escape. Shihan laughed, too, and when you heard it, you realised you hadn’t ever heard her genuine laugh. It was a nice sound to hear.
“You know,” she said, when silence had finally settled over you again. “It’s not the end of the world that you got injured. And I’m going to spare you the motivational speech, because I know you’re probably sick of it by now.” She looked at you, long and hard. “Just know that you’re stronger than you think, and that your fate is in your hands. Not anyone else’s.”
Before you could continue your conversation, your very own coach rushed into the room, face drained of colour. You both glanced up at her, brows furrowing in confusion at her expression. “What is it, shifu?” Shihan wondered.
“What happened?” you echoed, concern etched into your pretty features.
Her voice was hoarse when she answered, as if she’d been screaming. Or crying. “The judges have made their decision… and we are expected to make an appearance at the stadium as soon as possible.”
东京 TOKYO
2024
Long story short, you got first place at Nationals. And again two months later at the World Championships, representing your country.
It was a momentous occasion, when you were called up to the podium by the announcer, her American accent sounding harsh pronouncing the gentler tones of your name. But you didn’t care how it sounded, or how badly she butchered it, because you’d won. After all your hard work, you’d finally won, and you had something worthwhile to prove it.
The work didn’t end there for you, unfortunately, not considering your injury.
It still hung in the air like a foul smell after your wins, after you became the Taiwanese public’s darling, after the world learnt your name. News outlets covered your fall at Nationals extensively, thought out excellent and horrible names for it, for what it meant for you as an athlete. A major setback, some called it, something that would permanently impact your career for years to come. A reminder that everyone, even the most talented skaters, are human, said another publication. You liked that one, though it left a bad taste in your mouth regardless.
Despite all that, despite your well-placed hatred for it, despite your family’s fear of it, despite your coach’s grief towards it, you did your best to treat it as gently as you would any life-altering injury, to give yourself the time to recover while refusing to atrophy, refusing to give in to the temptation of premature retirement. You simply couldn’t, was your reasoning, throw all your hard work away because of a fractured collarbone. It was only an injury; you were only a person. It could heal. You could heal. You would heal.
You practiced as frequently usual, though took it undeniably easier on yourself in terms of exercises. You listened to your doctor, took her advice in stride and applied it diligently, determined to get yourself back to the way you were before you could change too much. You went on training camps, focused on rehabilitation, did everything you could in your position.
You did, however, take an indefinite hiatus from competing. You wouldn’t return to the beloved sport until you’d healed, physically and mentally. You wouldn’t return to the rink until you did so on your terms, no one else’s.
It was on one of these training camps, in the wonderful city of Tokyo, that you found, after hearing from a friend of a friend who’d been travelling with you, that there would be a series of hockey games in the area. The local team, the Tokyo Snow Leopards, playing against several smaller, less well-known teams. One of them being the Taipei Eagles.
“You know one of the players, right?” Lili, one of the girls you’d been training with since arriving in Tokyo, asked you one night. She’d signed herself up after suffering a nasty cut to the face that her teammate gave her during pairs training. “Um… what’s his name?” She turned to your other roommate, Jingxue, a girl from Shanghai who’d come after an ACL injury, and snapped her fingers as if searching for the answer. “He’s the cute defenceman?”
Jingxue shrugged hopelessly. She didn’t say much, you’d noticed.
You butted in, eager to get Lili to stop talking. “Yeah, I, uh… I don’t remember his name, but I know who you’re talking about. Yeah, we used to train together, a while ago. Not sure how he’s been these days.”
Lili rolled her eyes at her own forgetfulness, waving it off dismissively. “I’ll remember his name soon, but, yeah, you know who I’m talking about. Have you seen him since… I dunno, since?”
You shook your head. “Nope,” you denied, popping the ‘p’.
It’s what brought you here, at the nearest ice skating rink, sitting in the stands, caught between a roaring crowd around you and a deteriorating game in front of you. The Taipei Eagles uniform was different from the old team’s—or, could you really say old, when this was simply the senior league, and the Polar Bears had been the junior league? Regardless, where their uniforms had been red, white, and blue, the Eagles went for an undeniably mature look, opting rather for black, white, and navy blue.
James was as easy to spot as he had been two years ago, still the quickest player on the ice, still a large, bold 16 on the back of his jersey. You couldn’t see much else of him; couldn’t see much else of anyone besides the crowd members around you, really. Hockey was certainly a spirit- and personality-forward sport where the audience couldn’t judge anyone by appearances. That’s how you knew you wouldn’t ever be able to play the sport—you liked appearances far too much.
The air was as stale and electric as the air at any other hockey game would’ve been, lit up with the sounds of players’ skates slicing against the ice, with the smell of snow in your nostrils, with the heat of the moment creeping up your neck. It was undeniably addictive, and just as dangerous.
The game progressed well, or, perhaps, as well as you could perceive it did, because for all the changes you’d gone through since you’d last been in a place like this, you’d learnt nothing new about hockey. And just as well, really. You had far more important things to worry about. You wondered, then, how much James had changed, if at all. Looking down at him, it seemed he’d grown at least a bit. Perhaps a centimetre or five, something that could elevate him from a teen boy to a young adult. You wondered if he was still a clown. Still bitter inside. Still obsessive, still mean. Still your Yufan.
You knew he wouldn’t be. Yours in the literal sense, you mean. It had been nearly one and a half years since you’d last seen him, and you’d made it clear how you felt about each other that day. That last, all-too fateful day. But you wondered if he was still yours in the sense that he was still the same James you’d known. Still funny. Still passionate. Still kind. Still your Yufan.
Time passed, and eventually the first intermission became the second, then the third, and people were starting to get impatient waiting for the outcome of the game. It was a close one so far, Snow Leopards, six, Eagles, five. Only one or two more goals to determine who would be taking home this game’s trophy, this audience’s hearts.
The players were moving in a way that didn’t completely make sense to you. Agitation hung in the air, and it translated into their jerky movements, their sudden, reckless decision-making. At one point, one of his teammates threw James against the barrier, yelling in his face about a some kind of mistake he’d made. He’d simply shrugged him off, rolling his eyes like he would have years ago. The game continued, but you, and you were sure everyone else, could tell that something was off.
It was odd, how much it reminded you of your first performance at Nationals, despite the two having no correlation. But something in the air was the same; the prickling of nerves, the expectations hanging like heavy clouds threatening rain. The light was the same, the rink too bright, the stands too dark. You could only imagine what it looked like to the skaters on the ice—the looming darkness circling them, giving them tunnel vision. A loud, mechanical buzz cut through the pop music booming from the arena speakers that hadn’t done much to help the growing tension, the agitation you felt. The Snow Leopards had scored another point. Seven, five.
Buzz! Eight, five.
Buzz! Eight, six. A Japanese player was showed to the penalty box, face sour.
Buzz! Eight, seven. One of his teammates joined him, the Taiwanese skaters jeering in glee. That earned them a stern look from the referee, a young woman, and they shut up soon after that.
It was in the final minutes of the game that everything fell apart. The Snow Leopards had been spread thin, half of the team in the penalty box, the other half a mixture of their lacklustre and bench players. And yet, they still seemed to be sweeping the floor with their opponents. Tensions rose, and the Eagles were getting desperate for the win.
Two players had collided, fists and sticks flying. Somewhere in the midst of their scuffle, the puck had been stolen, and the crowd held unanimously their breath. Below, James raced across the ice eyes, alight with opportunity. This was his chance. His I made it moment. He’d make it. He would score, he thought, he knew, as he passed by the commotion, moving with all the grace of a trained figure skater, with the determination of a man who’d committed his life to a sport that would repay him now. All those evenings after school, all those training camps that nearly bankrupted his parents, all those fights, all that pain, it would all be worth it if he just made this one goal. His third of the game, his last of the season. He was close. So, so close.
A small sound, so quiet, so internal that no one but James could hear it. Small, nonthreatening, as he twisted his leg, just that little bit too far, too hard, too desperate, to make a turn. Snap!
You shot up from your seat.
He stopped. In the middle of the ice. Dead in his tracks, flat on his side. The scuffle stopped, players hovered around him with taut faces, expressions contorted with tension. Silence swept over the stadium like a hushed storm; some people stood up, their hands clutched to their chests; others stayed where they were, clamping their mouths shut in shock. What would’ve happened if this were a normal fall was this: the crowd would wait in anticipation for James to get back to his feet, to bow and show that he was fine, he was unharmed. That never happened. They’d wait for the okay, before erupting into applause, cheering for a diligent, passionate athlete taking a chance. That didn’t come.
Instead, he stayed where he was, curling into a foetal position, gloved hands encircling against his knee. His coach, a younger man, perhaps a decade or so older than James himself, rushed from beyond the barrier, slipping onto the ice in nothing but his sneakers, struggling until he reached him. They exchanged a few words, and the two teams skated closer, hiding them from the crowd. It was all a blur of activity from there; medics rushing the ice, James pushing them away and insisting that he was fine, that he didn’t need their help to stand up. Teammates exchanging worried glances, opponents bowing in respect as he finally took his leave, wincing in pain with every move.
“Apologies, everyone, but we will need to take an emergency intermission on account of the Taipei Eagles’ defenceman’s injury. We will back in fifteen minutes with an update, and the game will resume shortly thereafter. Thank you for your patience.”
It seems to be so that, when the gods bring together two people as competitive and desperate as yourself and James, they throw a dice to decide who would win. And winning, well, that looks different to everyone. Sometimes it is literal—they beat their opponent; their opponent is their love, and their prize could be physical. Sometimes it refers to something larger than any two people—life, how it beats them; they are in a match against fate, in a fight against life and death, and their lives depend on the outcome of the game.
Other times it’s a mixture of both. The competitors—lovers, friends, family, enemies, all four at once—are thrown into the game of life, and each trial they face, they live through together, on opposite sides of the net, or the glass, or the field, is a period in the match. There are intermissions, inbetween moments where the tensions ease, where you could love one another. These don’t last too long, not usually. Not when you are as competitive as you are. Once they are over, once the whistle has been blown, it is as if you are nothing and everything to each other.
You forget this, that love isn’t really supposed to be a game, that fate does not favour those that adhere to its ridiculous fancies with the simple belief that it will lead them to where they belong. You forget that humans connect by cooperating, by listening, by compromising. You forget that you are not pieces on a chess board, the outcome of your game dependent on anyone besides yourselves, athletes standing in front of judges and spectators, waiting for someone else to decide how they should continue.
There is a winner. Of course there is—in these games, there always is. But this win, it’s bitter. It leaves a sour taste in your mouth, leaves tears brimming in your eyes. It makes you remember that the path to victory is paved with heartbreak and betrayal. It reminds you that there can only be one winner that takes it all.
You were the one unlucky enough to win. You returned from the hospital after Judge Liu had called Peiling to tell her that you’d won, that you’d placed first in the 2023 Taiwan Figure Skating Championships, and you were helped onto the podium by the two skaters who’d placed in the positions below you, bronze and silver. You turned to the cameraman in front of you, holding your gold medal with trembling fingers, smiling as widely as you could will yourself to. Cameras flashed all around you, blinding you, burning into your retinas. The cheers of the judges and spectators were deafening, though their voices all faded away when all was said and done, when you’d looked at your peers, and realised you were all alone on that podium.
Wen Jiyi, a figure skating prodigy from Kaohsiung, the girl who’d come second place to you, turned to find her family all rushing towards her with large smiles on their faces, thanking Buddha for his kindness towards them, towards their daughter, who not only made it to Nationals, but made it this far. You could hear her friends cheering for her from the stands, chanting her name like a carol.
Hsu Nana, one of your old classmates, the girl who’d come in last, was embraced by her father, his strong arms enveloping her in a strong hug. They’d only had each other, you remembered; her mother was out of the picture before she could get any siblings, and her father had never remarried. And still, with what little they had, with her coming in third overall, her father murmured into her hair, “You’ll always be a winner in my book.”
And you? You were alone. Your family was at a private hospital, filling out forms for you, listening to your doctor explain your healing plan to them. Your friends had fallen away over the years because you’d chosen to focus on the one thing that would repay you more graciously than any relationships would. Your coach watched fretfully from the barrier, holding your new crutches in her hands. And your boyfriend’s parents were watching you, clapping for you, unaware that you’d left their son behind simply because he’d questioned your confidence.
You’d won. You’d made it. All that lay ahead was success; some healing would get in the way, yes, but after those quick four, five months, you’d be free to become the star you’d always been meant to be. Nationals, World Championships, Grand Prix, the Olympics. The world was an oyster you’d wrenched open, and you could do what you pleased with it. But all that, at what cost?
The spotlight shone brighter on those without anything to hold them back, but did it keep you warm when night fell, and people forgot about the stars in the sky?
“What are you doing here?” were James’ first words to you since Nationals.
You stood in front of him, a gentle, contemplative expression on your face. Behind you, the nurse had closed the curtains so that you could have some privacy, though it did nothing to drown out the sounds of the emergency room. You could faintly hear the conversation of a couple in the bed next to you, and tried to pay no mind to the fact that it sounded as if the patient’s boyfriend were accusing her of arson.
James had changed in the time you were apart; neither for better or for worse, just… naturally, as all humans change. Your suspicion that he’d grown taller was proven correct as your eyes swept over his form, over the plains of his lean body. His hair was longer, bleached and coloured to a light brown that looked like autumn. His face was the same, if not more mature, the twist of his lips dissatisfied where it had always been content. His eyes were still as kind as you remembered them, yet undeniably morose. Like something had broken him, and he hadn’t gotten to healing it yet.
You could only imagine how different you looked from the last time you saw James; taller, more mature, stronger, yet carrying yourself with that familiar attitude that dared anyone to doubt you. It was more steadfast than before, perhaps. There were wounds, and tears, and breaks, but that didn’t make you any less yourself.
“I was worried about you,” was your response.
He stared at you like he’d been staring at you for the past ten minutes. “That’s not what I mean,” he said, as if you were supposed to know. “I mean, what are you doing in Japan?”
You smiled softly, the realisation shifting your demeanour. “Oh. I was here on a training camp, just for some rehab. I hurt my ankle pretty badly in a competition a few weeks ago, and Peiling insisted I come to Tokyo for treatment and practice.”
He nodded, not gracing you with a response just yet. His gaze drifted from you, dropped somewhere below him, surveying the brace around your ankle. “So nothing’s changed,” he spoke, voice empty. “You’re still as clumsy as ever.” He remembered all the bruises, all the accidental falls when you failed to adjust to being off the ice, the cases of wobbly legs where he needed to brace you against him, his arm winding over your shoulder, keeping you close to him.
“I guess so,” you agreed. The silence that followed wasn’t natural; it was one that came only to people who’d once in their lives meant everything to each other, and met again when they were completely different people. Except, you weren’t that different from before, were you? “What’s the diagnosis?”
He sighed. “A severe lateral meniscus tear. I’m out for the season.”
You had anticipated something like that. But no amount of anticipation could’ve prepared you for the pain falling over his handsome face. There was something about it that made you feel as if you weren’t meant to see it—the tremble of his bottom lip, the way he tried to keep his tears at bay, the sheer, charged emotion of the scene, humanity in its rawest form. Yet, here he was, James Chao, letting you see, not for the first time in your lives, a part of him he’d hidden from anyone else.
No, the first time had been much happier. It had been when he’d introduced you to his parents, then again when he’d indirectly hinted that he loved you as much as he loved his own friends and family. Then it had been in every fight you had where he didn’t yell, where he didn’t disagree simply to prove a point, where he let you humiliate him like he never would’ve allowed anyone else to.
He tried to keep a brave face; of course he did. That was his forté, pretending as if he were unaffected by anything that happened around him, to him. You wished he hadn’t built up those walls around you, but this time around, you couldn’t fault him for it. He’d let them down and you’d selfishly exploited that. You didn’t deserve to see him any more vulnerable than he was already allowing you.
You took a seat at the end of his bed, next to where he’d braced himself on the heels of his palms, his legs swung over the edge, not because he’d invited you, but because you could feel something in you telling you to sit down. To brush your clothed knee with his bandaged one, to press your shoulder against his arm. The gods, high above, sitting along their great panel, moving another piece on the playing mat which was your intertwined fates. Taking pity. Thinking, Maybe?
James let you, ducking his head until he was almost level with you, where he was usually a head taller. He let you touch him, if only briefly, let himself bask in your unfamiliar warmth. You felt differently from how you did, once, when you were younger. Not bad. Just natural. Like all people are different as they grow.
“I’m sorry,” you said, when the silence became too much for you to bear. Your voice was hushed, and you felt like a criminal standing before a judge, eager to keep the attention off you, to fill the silences in which you could be accused, or asked questions. “For not…”
What? For not visiting? For not apologising sooner? For not being a better person to you? For behaving awfully when all you were trying to do was help? For being a scared, misguided, dogged teenager? For taking advantage of your kindness? For not kissing you after that last practice we had together, after you moved closer and told me you wanted to?
“…for everything,” you sighed. “You deserved better. You deserve better than what I can give you.” Than what the world’s given you, you thought, but couldn’t say.
He smiled breathlessly, wiping harshly at his eyes as if to clean tears that hadn’t yet fallen. “What am I going to do, now?” he asked, perhaps to no one in particular, perhaps to you specifically. After all, you’d dealt with a career-altering injury before. You’d know how to go about it, what he should do next, which steps he should take to get himself back on track. But the path that works for one may not work for the other.
You knew what he was thinking: what he’d been thinking for the longest time. That hockey was his only option, the only thing he was good at, the only future he saw for himself.
You exhaled gently, hands twitching as if they longed to reach out and grasp onto his ringed fingers, feel his warmth. And you told him the words that could’ve helped you once, if you’d been more grateful then, “You’re a talented boy, Yufan. I know that. You know that. Everyone knows that. But what you need to realise is that your talent doesn’t only lie in one thing.”
“But what if it does?”
You shrugged. “How are you supposed to know if you never try something new?”
If you never give yourself a second chance?
“I don’t know. I don’t know.”
When he cried, when he broke down in tears next to you, burying his face in his hands as sobs racked his body, you acted against your better judgement and curled an arm around his shoulder. He responded to the touch like it was second nature, leaning into your chest like you were a lifeline who’d left him when he’d needed you most. Your hands froze, stayed millimetres from his skin, only a breath away from actually touching him like you wanted to. Needed to.
In that moment, there were a million things you could say. A million things you wanted to say. But all those words, those sentiments, those apologies, those proclamations and confessions, died in your throat; because nothing could mend the wound you’d caused. Not even you cradling him to your chest could fix it, could fix the hurt you’d inflicted on him, not even the way his lips pressed against your healed collarbone could erase the words he’d said, the things he’d done in his anger and jealousy towards you. Nothing could change what you’d said when you were nothing more than two terrified teenagers who didn’t know the difference between competition and love.
Could they ever be erased, or fixed, or mended, or healed, if a second chance came along? Or would that simply be something you were left to ponder as you grew?
香港 HONG KONG
2025
“Okay, so, our flight is in two hours, which means we’ll need to be at the boarding gate in fifteen minutes—”
“In what world should we have to wait at the boarding gate for over an hour? We’ve got plenty of time to explore and pass the time until at least half an hour before we need to board.”
Your friend gave you an unimpressed look, like, Really? Kim Juhoon, despite being a world-famous, overachieving figure skater at the ripe age of seventeen, was somehow one of the most neurotic, perpetually unsure people you’d ever met. So much so that, on his way back from competing at the World Championships as one of the two youngest athletes, where he would be hopping on a plane to Taipei so that you could show him where you’d grown up, he insisted that you wait at the boarding gate for more than an hour and a half, just to be safe. His words, not yours.
“Don’t make that face at me,” you said, shaking your head like a dismissive elder sibling. “I know what I’m talking about. You need to relax, Jju. Nothing bad is going to happen if we’re not a million hours early for our flight.”
He pointed a perfectly manicured and terribly accusatory finger at you. “You’re exaggerating to make me look stupid, and I won’t let you do it. I just won’t.”
“You already did,” you teased, grinning.
Even in all these years, airports had never lost their charm to you. The fluorescent lights beat down on the polished white floors, the night sky countering it like the moon did the sun. People filled up the place, walking to and fro, making arrivals and departures, saying goodbye to their families, kissing their spouses in greeting. The air smelled fresh, like air freshener and new beginnings. Old memories, new places. The good, and the unexpected.
Your coaches looked at you from where they strode at an alarming pace several metres ahead, before turning to each other, like, These kids. Meanwhile, you and Juhoon marvelled at the sight of a couple dragging their very fussy toddler out of a nearby takeout spot, the baby a screaming, wailing mess.
“That’s kind of how I feel right now,” Juhoon noted calmly.
You chuckled softly. Both of you were still reeling from your competition—the annual World Championships, this time held worlds away in Boston, had left you fatigued and a little bit out of sorts. Like, on a different plane of existence out of sorts. Still, you’d qualified, and secured spots at the September Qualifiers in Beijing, so it would all pay off in time.
“Same,” you agreed, bobbing your head.
Since Juhoon had insisted on being at the boarding gates two hours early, you’d made your way through the airport without much consideration for ogling at the great building, though Hong Kong International Airport was, in your opinion, a true beauty to behold. You did, however, stop at a few of the digital advertisements, displayed on larger than life boards and featuring some of your friends promoting products from their various sponsors. Juhoon snapped a selfie of the two of you in front of an Adidas board, sending it to one of his school friends—a swimmer on his way to the 2028 Olympics—with a particularly cheeky caption; the two of you posed in front of one of Shihan’s Dior adverts, pulling faces and mimicking her own, and so on and so forth you went until you actually came across an ad with your face on it.
It was one of your more recent campaigns for an energy drink—the audience is open to decide which, depending on how they view you. You were posed on the ice, in your training outfit, jewellery glimmering in the grainy film shot. There was some sort of quirky caption written in the air next to you, something that convinced the audience you actually got your energy from their product. It seemed like a candid scene, poised as if you’d been caught in a mundane moment in the middle of training, though the way you appeared more photogenic than you knew you were let you, and only you, know that it was staged. You tended to look a bit less human when you’d been exercising for two hours straight.
“Wah,” said Juhoon, mouth open in feigned shock. “Looking good, ttangkong.”
“Pfft— shut up,” you said, shoving his shoulder. “I didn’t say anything about your Louis Vitton ad, wugui.”
“I saw you snap that sneaky picture,” he shot back. He turned to you, narrowing his eyes. “Don’t think I didn’t notice you posting it, either.”
You rolled your eyes, raising your hands in a gesture of surrender. “So I posted a picture of my talented, handsome friend,” you said. “Sue me.”
He shook his head, yawning. He stretched his arms over his head, tears gathering at the corners of his eyes, his shirt riding up to expose the too-low waistband of his jeans. “I’m too tired to call my lawyer right now. You’ll have to settle for a formal complaint.”
You shrugged. “Fine by me. Now—” you picked up your shoulders, pulling your pink suitcase behind you— “we going to the boarding gate, or what?”
Juhoon smiled softly, nodding. “Yeah,” he said, running a hand through his hair. “Leggo, or I’ll have an anxiety attack.”
“Jjinja?” you teased, the world rolling uneasily off your tongue.
“Ni hen fan ei,” he sighed, swift and easy.
You scoffed, landing a faint punch to his shoulder. “So annoying,” you muttered. “Let’s go.”
On your way to the boarding gate, you were distracted for a second time by something catching your eye. You stopped; Peiling, Juhoon, and his coach kept walking, not noticing that you’d halted, and were now staring at the double doors of the airport’s gift shop, gaze trained on whatever was behind the thick glass.
Something churned in your stomach, told you to go inside, to see what the tiny tourist trap had to offer. You turned to them, speaking absently over your shoulder, “Uh, you guys go ahead. I just want to check something out, here.”
“Hmm?” Juhoon hummed in question.
“I’ll be with you now,” you said, your feet already carrying you to the entrance. And that was the last any of them saw of you for the next fifteen minutes.
You wandered into the shop, your entrance signalled by the chime of a bell above the door, and realised relatively quickly that it certainly wasn’t its charm that had pulled you in. It was chock full of tacky tchotchkes, red and yellow lanterns hung all over, with rows upon rows of magazines and T-shirts that said ‘I HEART HK’ all over the front. You wrinkled your nose in distaste, wilfully ignoring the fact that you were wearing a shirt with the same print on it, though the smell of incense was a welcome sensation.
The shop seemed to be empty save for you and the elderly owner, who was ducked behind the counter, seemingly in search of something. Music drifted through the air from an old record player, the quality as dusty and old-fashioned as the tunes themselves, reminiscent to the Cantopop you knew James’ father listened to.
You found James Chao among the racks of tasteless souvenirs, perusing the shelves as if he were actually thinking of buying something. You stopped in your tracks when you saw him, your boots scuffing against the grainy floor. That something. It had always been that something.
He looked different from the last time you’d seen him in Tokyo. Of course he did—people changed. You’d changed. Your parents had changed. Taipei had changed. Why wouldn’t James? He couldn’t be your emotionally constipated older boyfriend forever.
It seemed he’d finally finished growing, standing nearly a head taller than you still; that hadn’t changed, at least. His hair was shorter, spikier, blonde highlights peeking out from between his natural roots. He wore a fitted denim jacket, tufts of fur lining the collar; his jeans hung low on his slim hips, and for a moment, you wondered when he’d become so fashionable. So grown up. You supposed it needed to happen sometime. He was due to turn twenty this year, after all.
A few things hadn’t changed, as well, perhaps to ease your heart out of the assumption that the boy you’d loved had become a man you knew nothing of. A pair of tinted, frameless glasses were tucked into his T-shirt, and when he slid them onto his face to examine the price of a snowglobe with a miniature Buddha in it, he looked almost identical to how he did on the nights he brought his homework to the skating rink, solving complex Calculus equations while you skated frenzied laps around the ice. A pair of silver earrings dangled from his earlobes, the same you’d gotten him for your one month anniversary. Odd to think you’d even made it that far when you fucked it up immediately afterwards.
Again, you wondered what he would think if he’d turned to see you staring at him. You’d grown up quite a bit since Tokyo, since Nationals. You now wore the glasses you’d dreaded to in place of those tricky contact lenses; your eyes still didn’t work. You had more jewellery, earrings lining your lobes and cartilage, rings encircling your fingers; they were all still silver. Your hair had grown; it was still unruly. Your shoes were still dirty. Your smile was the same.
He did notice you eventually, with the fear and reluctance of someone who had noticed, through the corner of their eye, the intense stare of a stranger. And when his gaze landed on you, still shorter than him, still with that wild kindness in your eyes, still with those lips he’d wished he’d gotten to kiss before it was too late, he couldn’t help but soften.
“Hi,” he breathed, and you swore your knees would give out.
“Hi,” you replied, obviously suave and cool and not awkward at all. “How— are you—? Are you good? Well? Are you well?”
He nodded. “Yeah. You?”
“As well as I could be,” you said.
He raised his chin, as if to nod again, but simply kept it there. His eyes flicked somewhere to the right of him, and he said, “Tired from the competition?”
Your eyes widened. “Wha—? How did you—?” You turned to where he was looking outside the shop’s window, and came face to face with a large screen replaying the highlight reels from your routine in Boston. “Oh. That’s— it’s— yeah. A little. Sorry, that’s…” You wrinkled your nose at the sight. “I could’ve gone without seeing that. Again.”
You turned back to look at James, but his eyes were still locked on you. On the screen; a larger than life figure he’d once held securely in his arms, picked up like you’d weighed nothing. A small smile was etched into his features, appearing on his handsome face like watercolour on a canvas. Soft, bleeding through the edges.
“I saw it on the television earlier,” he said. “You did well.”
You couldn’t help grinning. “Yeah? You think?”
“I know. So, what are you in Hong Kong for?”
“Oh, my friend and I are on our way back to Taipei, but we just wanted to make a quick stop here for a day or two. I had to show him where Chungking Express was filmed.”
James chuckled softly. Something that hadn’t changed, he noted. Your obsession with niche films.
“And you?” you asked.
He shut one eye, as if in thought. “I came to visit some family. It was my grandma’s eightieth, so I stayed for the month.”
“Oh, really? That’s great!”
It was a bit of an odd scene, to be honest. Talking to the man you’d had a very passionate, unhealthy, short-lived relationship with as a teenager like you were two friends catching up over coffee. But that’s what you and James were, before everything else. Friends. Begrudging, snappish, eye-rolling friends. Training buddies who spent too much time together. You practically hadn’t seen each other properly for two years, but it was easy to fall back into that dynamic with him.
He nodded, though he didn’t grace you with a direct reply. Instead he said, “Yeah. I’ve been trying to figure things out recently, so I decided staying overseas for a bit would help.”
You paused. “You’re not playing for the Eagles anymore?”
He shook his head.
“You retired?”
“Yeah. I figured I didn’t want to waste my life trying to make something of a sport I didn’t even like that much.”
“But you had the talent for it,” you tried, attempting an encouraging smile.
He returned it in all its gentleness and beauty. “I know. But I’m not you. I can’t lose myself in my passion the way you do. Doesn’t make me any less committed, I just… I guess I realised my talent doesn’t lie in only one thing.”
You hummed softly. “You did? I’m glad.”
“Yeah,” he agreed. “It’s helped a lot.”
The silence that enveloped you reminded you of the hospital in Tokyo. It was thick, and filled with the feeling of your guilt. It was your own guilt, of course, nothing projected onto you, nothing brought upon you by anyone by yourself. It was the self-aware sort, the kind people felt when they knew they had sins to answer for, mistakes they’d made, bad decisions they’d left in the gods’ hands.
Your second apology was different from your first one in that you didn’t try to cover all your fronts in one sentence. Instead, you stepped closer to James, effectively grabbing his attention, and said, “I’m sorry I thought less of you because you played hockey.” Then, “I’m sorry I treated you like shit just because I was scared.” And, “I’m sorry I couldn’t give you the love you deserved when you so readily gave it to me. I’m sorry I was a bad friend, and a bad girlfriend, and a bad person. I know I was younger, and I was dumber, but that doesn’t make what I did any less… shitty. I was a little asshole, and I deserved your anger for all those years.”
Instead of agreeing with you, curling his lip in anger and telling you off for your wrongdoings, James looked at you like you hung the moon and the stars, wrote the code he lived and loved by. “It’s okay,” he said. “We were just kids.”
“Kids do fucked up shit sometimes,” you protested. “And I did.”
“Still okay.” He noticed the look you were giving him, and added, “That doesn’t mean I’m forgiving you immediately. I’m still furious with you. But, I got my second chance. I’d say it’s only fair you get yours.”
Your brow furrowed in a frown. “Are you saying we should… try again?”
Yufan shrugged. “Why not? Love is more fun the second time round, anyway.” He stepped forward, face inching closer to yours. “As long as I get to have you as my first kiss, because I’ve been waiting for three damn years.”
And who were you to deny him that luxury?
Your first ever kiss happened in a tacky souvenir shop in Hong Kong International Airport, with reels of you playing on a television in the background, and Cantopop drifting through the air as you moulded your body to his, lips slotted together in an embrace that said please don’t let go. Yufan pulled you impossibly closer, his soft lips pressed against yours like a whisper of encouragement for you to get lost in him. Years and years of tension, pent up frustrations, and wishes leaked into the kiss, years of history and years of love that you hadn’t had the heart to receive before you were ready.
“I’m not going to admit it right now,” Yufan said, breaking the kiss only enough that he was murmuring against your lips, though he was going to do just that in the next ten seconds, “but I’ve had the fattest crush on you since I saw you three years ago when you stole my suitcase.”
Basically, two months ago we went in England (sorry guys I forgot to update) and he kinda was always with me… we spoke a lot and he even put his music in my headphones… the first night, there was a party hosted by our school and we were in a corner singing to "don’t cha" and I was dancing as we stared into each other and he smiled at me and leaned down THEN HE LOOKED LIKE HE WANTED TO KISS ME but every time someone seemed to get closer to us and he seemed to realize that we were sooo close ♡
I also fell asleep on his shoulder not once, BUT TWICE and the second time I ended up hugging his arm 😓😓 idk what to do anymore chat does he like me?
⋆.𐙚 ̊ ur boyfriend james insists on doing your makeup, and unfortunately he wins the battle.
—🎥 fem!reader x bf!james , fluff , skinship , kissing , dark humour <3
You don’t quite know how you’ve ended up here but, here you are, perched on your bathroom counter, legs swinging whilst James is stood in between them.
“Okay, i’ve seen you do this a hundred times,” he says, opening your concealer like it’s an undiscovered specimen of some sort. “This can’t be too hard.”
You’re already fighting back a painful laugh when he starts to lean in with the concealer, but to your lips. He’s got a look which says ‘this must be right’ plastered on his face, way too focused yet still miserably failing. James placed his hand delicately on your jaw, his thumb under your chin, tilting up your head to meet his eyes.
“Here goes nothing.” He says, zero trust in his eyes.
He does his first swatch of his masterpiece.
“Does this beauty regime include using my concealer as lip gloss?” You question between giggles, a beige smear at the corner of your mouth.
You can’t help but giving him a playful kiss on the lips. He makes this noise, not a word, more like a “huh?”, his hands frozen in place, still gripping your concealer, like someone hit a pause button on him. For a second, he’s just stood there, his lips parted with shock. He loved when you gave him these kisses full of surprise yet overwhelming love.
“What was that for baby?” He questions, slightly star struck.
“Nothing,” You reply “You’re just cute.”
He stares at you for a beat. Then he laughs - shocked, wrecked, like you’ve knocked every single thought out of him, looking down shyly.
“But you better fix my lips.” You add.
It’s like his whole body restarts at your warning, he looks up at you, eyes widening, and then back down to your lips, he eagerly tries to wipe it off with his thumb but just ends up smearing it all over your chin. He steps back to try and assess what he’s done, his eyebrows furrow into his hairline and scratches his head like he’s reviewing the mona lisa, a stain of concealer on the corner of his lips that makes you stare in admiration.
“Right, nothing a little eyeshadow can’t fix.” He states, still ever so slightly stunned but ready to lock in.
Honestly, you’ve prepared yourself to look like a clown after he’s done, but hey, anything to make your boyfriend happy.
He rambles through your makeup bag, pulling out your favourite eyeshadow palette of beautiful nude colours, ranging from mahogany brown to pale beige.
James opens the palette and assesses each colour with deep concentration, his eyes lighting up when he sees the dark maroon, the corner of his lips pulled up with mischief. You know exactly where this is going to go but you just give in, he’s already this far into ruining your face, you may go all the way.
“Close your eyes, trust me” He says, rubbing his middle finger into the eyeshadow.
“I trust you with my life Jami, just not my eyelids.”
But, it’s already too late, he’s carelessly tapping the pigment onto your eyelid. You open your other eye that hasn’t been ruined yet and see him standing there with his tongue poking out the side, is this supposed to help him?
He pulls back, horrified. “If anyone sees you, i’d be charged with assault and battery.”
The comment caught you so off guard you couldnt help but hit his chest, you both laugh together for what feels like forever, until he’s crouched on the floor, stomach hurting from laughing too much.
“Okay, one more step.” He says, weak at the knees, his eyes glazed with tears.
Blush is the next step he chooses, he pumps the brush so hard against the powder there’s a cloud of pink dust wafting into the air between you two. There’s specks of blush everywhere, in your hair, on the mirror and possibly in your mouth.
The brush tickles your cheek, he’s gentle with the way he treats you, maybe not the same case when it comes to getting the product out. You appreciated that about James though, he was always sure to treat you like a princess, he wouldn’t ever hurt you. You just wished that same concept applied to your expensive makeup.
He does his ‘finishing touches’ and shuts the blush compact, like he’s a champion chess player hitting the clock after checkmate.
“Take a look at my masterpiece.”
You spin around to the mirror behind you, one eye looks like you’ve been punched, your lips are painted beige giving you the sick patient look. And your cheeks are so red it looks like you’ve been violently slapped.
“Jami, I look like a crime scene.” You say, shocked. You knew it was gonna be bad but nothing could’ve prepared you for what you see in the reflection. James is stood proudly in the back, arms crossed and his mouth still laced with a concealer coloured kiss mark.
He clearly didn’t notice as one moment and he’s smiling, and the next he’s up against the counter rubbing his mouth violently.
“Take it off,” He groans, but he’s smiling. He likes the mark you’ve left on him. “I didn’t consent to getting my makeup done too!”
You shake your head, grabbing his shoulder to make him face you, and pull him closer by the hem of his shirt, “Nope you did this to me, now we can match.” and you kiss him again, this time more slow and intentional.
He makes a muffled protest against your mouth, but he gives in like he always does, hands sliding around your waist. And when you pull back, his whole mouth is stained, like he’s just eaten a powdered donut. You expect more teasing, but instead he raises his hands your face, well the not ruined parts of it. He does this thing, gazing over, admiring the mess he’s made.
“You do look like a crime scene,” he says. “But,only the prettiest crime scene ever.”
You roll your eyes at him, “Of course you say that, you turned me into this mess!”
“I don’t have to say anything,” this time whispering into your ear, “I say it because it’s true, you’re pretty in my mess.”
You feel the heat start to rise to your cheeks, luckily it would go unnoticed since you’re already painted an unusual shade of pink.
“Idiot, i’m never letting you near my face again.”
| desc : 2005 au where you and martin have been best friends for years but you both have obvious crushes on each other. nothing between you has happened until a house party.
| w.c : 1.2 k
| notes and warnings : very brief mentions of drinking, smoking, and sex! not proofread so there may be mistakes! very nervous lover boy martin! you both are having your first kiss with each other!
| choco's note : this is my first time publishing a fic since 2021 so there may be mistakes! this is quite short and i tend to lean towards dialogue but it's not pure dialogue! i hope you guys like it! <33
you've been sitting at your vanity for about 30 minutes when you hear your mom call your name and ask when you'll be done getting ready from downstairs.
"one second, i'm just putting on some jewelry!" you yell back, slipping on some silver bangles.
it's a one in a lifetime chance, your mom voluntarily letting you go to a random's party without you having to sneak out.
you finally get up from your chair and adjust your shorts before grabbing your go-to purse from your door knob and throw it around your shoulder. you put only your essentials : lip gloss, phone, ipod nano, earbuds, gum, wallet, and perfume.
you hurry downstairs, nearly tripping over your foot on the last step.
"mom, i'm ready!" you say, peeking into the kitchen to find her wiping down the counter.
"has yunah texted you, your friends should be outside by now," she says, looking over her shoulder at you.
"uh, yes, they should be down the driveway. bye bye!" you turn around and wave at your mom.
"y/n, remember! no drinking, smoking, and most certainly not having sex!"
"mom, I don't even have a boyfriend, what makes you think i'd do that?" you raise an eyebrow.
"who knows," she shrugs and goes back to cleaning down the counter.
you roll your eyes and turn back toward the door to leave. you're met with the warm mid-june breeze brushing your bare shoulders. you close the door behind you and start walking down your porch.
"so glad you didn't have to sneak out this time," ella laughs as you approach her, yunah, and jiwoo.
"hush, after that comment, you're lucky i'm not turning my as snack around and rotting in bed all night," you gently shove her shoulder with a smile.
"y/n, you didn't bother to tell us that martin boy was going to be here...?" jiwoo lowers her gaze at you, her tone sounding annoyed.
"jiji, if I knew, I would've told you. no, I didn't know!"
"no you wouldn't have. you knew that if we knew he'd be here, we wouldn't have come," yunah counters, knowing she's right.
you purse your lips and squint, not wanting to admit they're both right.
"y/nnie, i say you go say hi to your boyfriend!" ella pushes you in martin's direction with a smirk.
"he's not my boyfriend!" you shout as you walk away from them.
"that's what she's concerned about?" you hear from behind, followed by giggling.
you look back towards martin's direction to see him already smiling that bright smile and waving dramatically. you wave back and push through the crowd of people around you.
"i didn't know you'd be here!" he smiles as you get to him.
"surprise! i didn't expect my mom to let me come but i guess she was in a good mood today!" you smile but decide to tease him, "you come here on your skateboard?"
"hey, i'll have you know, I came here in a car!" he points a finger at you, acting offended.
"james drove you here?" you raise a brow and smirk, pushing him further.
"well..." he scratches the back of his head, avoiding your eyes. you just got your answer.
you laugh and look around to see your friends approaching with juun, stella, haum, sion, and dohoon.
"let's play truth or dare!" haum smiles, looking too excited.
"okay!" martin exclaims, returning her smile.
you know truth or dare never ends well for you.
you end up sitting beside martin and one of his friends, seonghyeon. why did ella, yunah, and jiwoo all have to leave you sitting between two boys while they're all together?
"y/n! your turn!" haum looks over at you, snapping you out of your trance.
"huh? oh, okay!" you smile but realize it's your turn to choose between truth or dare.
"um... i pick..." this has to be one of the most stressful decisions of your life.
"i pick dare!" you blurt out to not overthink it or change your mind, keonho would bother you about being 'too pussy' the rest of the game.
you see haum nod approvingly and smirk as she starts thinking about your dare, making you realize you fucked up.
"martin is your best friend, right?"
"yes...?"
"good! kiss him!"
you whip your head towards her, your eyes wide.
"excuse me...?"
"you heard me! i dare you to kiss edwards martin!"
you look at him beside you to see his face has completely gone red, making him look like a cherry, so cute.
"don't be a pussy, y/nnie!" keonho starts, making you facepalm as your suspicions were right.
"you can do it outside if you're too scared to have your first kiss in front of a bunch of people!" jiwoo smiles, she's too kind.
"i'm not-" you start before hearing martin stand up beside you.
"let's go, y/n," he says, already walking to the bedroom door and going outside.
"wait for me then!" you scramble to get up, leaving your purse behind.
who's house even is this? you were just given an address...
you shake your head as you step out onto the back porch behind martin.
"y/n-"
"martin-"
"you can go first!" he offers, nodding once at you.
"y'know, we don't have to do this, we don't have to kiss..."
"do you want to?" he asks, looking your way. he got all serious...
"uh..." do you?
do you want to kiss your best friend you've had a crush on for the longest time?
"i mean, we kind of have to...!" you try laughing it off but he, usually finding everything funny, isn't laughing so you shut your mouth.
"yeah but we don't have to, it's just a stupid dare," he's deflecting. is he nervous?
"you know what? fine. i want to kiss you, tin!" you blurt out once again, not even thinking about it.
you, who usually thinks everything over to not say anything bad, didn't think about something that could change a whole relationship. is this what having a crush truly feels like?
"and you're not lying?" he whispers.
you sigh before answering, already in too deep to deny everything.
"far, far from lying..."
"may i...?" he asks, his hands hovering over your waist.
you nod and even lean towards him.
he grabs your waist gently, careful not to press too hard. you can see he's quite nervous.
“do it at your own pace,” you try to lighten him up.
“you haven’t kissed anyone right?” he gulps, seemingly worried.
“nope, neither have you, right?” he shakes his head.
“okay well, just do it… a peck or something?” you try to give him advice but clearly you don’t know what you’re talking about.
he nods and leans down, pauses right before his lips touch yours as if asking for permission one more time.
you hum as a yes, knowing that if you nod or move your head in the slightest, your lips would touch.
he closes the small gap.
his lips press against yours gently. he’s so nervous, he’s not even moving his lips or anything.
you lift your hands and place them on his shoulders in an attempt to make him more comfortable.
you move your lips first, kissing his bottom lip.
his fingers press against your waist slightly.
he pulls away first, his face somehow even more red than it was when he first heard your dare.
“i really really like you, y/n…” he whispers.
“i like you too, martin,” you smile and peck his lips once more before wrapping your arms around his neck. his arms wrap around your waist, his chin resting on your shoulder.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who sneaks into your room when your parents go to bed. he tries to be romantic about it, but his tall ass barley can keep quiet while coming up through the window.
‘martin, can you be any louder?’ you whisper, shutting your window quietly as he grins at you stupidly.
‘oh cmon, baby. we’re fine.’ he reassures you, taking his shoes off.
‘fine, but if we get caught again i swear—‘ your threat is cut off by his kiss, his cold arms wrapping around your pajamas.
‘shh.. we won’t.’ he whispers against your lips.
you grumble something, and he only can laugh against your lips.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who keeps a polaroid of you in his guitar case. every time he goes to play, he opens it to you.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who takes you to his band practices, introducing to all his members. of course, they know how whipped he is for you.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who gets jealous when he sees you with more preppier boys but won’t tell you. it’s not that he doesn’t trust you, because he does. it’s just the worry that you’ll leave him for a guy that has more similarities to you.
of course, you would never.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who loves when you wear his shirts. the way it fits on your shorter body, you not even knowing half of the bands on there, makes his head spin.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who has gotten the both of you in trouble for skipping multiple times. he just can’t help it when he misses you.
- the two of you hide in the janitors closet, the both of you practically chest to chest because of the small space.
“we’re going to get in trouble again, tin.” you whisper between kisses, letting out an ‘ow’ as your body backed up into a shelf.
“no we won’t.” he assures you, pulling you back to him.
you sigh, choosing to trust him as you close your eyes and kiss him again. you guys are so wrapped in each other you don’t even realize the light coming through as the door open at first. but once you do you push martin off.
“ow— what the hell was that for?” he rubbed his back, looking at you with confused puppy eyes.
“seriously?” the janitor lets out, mop bucket and mop in his hands. “you kids do this every week.”
you both stand there like deers in headlights, not knowing what to say or do.
“well? get out before i call your parents!” the janitor threatens, both you and martin dashing out of there.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who made you a song on his guitar, writing the lyrics all by himself. you can’t help but fall in love with him all over again as he strums, his voice like honey as he sings to only you.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who sits and watches rom coms with you, even if he sometimes hates it ( he’ll never tell you that, though).
@ 。— alt bf!martin who loves how you stick out like a sore thumb when you go shopping with him. bringing you to stores like hot topic, gadzooks, etc.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who picks you up every morning, having his passenger seat decorated by you. the pink seat comforter and girly decorations a contrast to the rest of his car.
@ 。— alt bf!martin who lets all of his myspace followers know that you’re his girl, posting your guys dates all the time. he loves showing you off.
— the end . @st4r-u1tra
sorry for not posting for a while. school was stressing me out esp with testing and the year coming to an end.. but i hope you enjoy this
SO CHE SPESSO MI INCAZZO, MA CHI SI INCAZZA ALLA FINE CI TIENE
༄ martin is they boy you always had a back and forth, after he went to canada for summer vacation thing are different
italian fratboy!martin x reader | angst, italian school settings, both martin and reader smokes, swearing
thea's notes 🪷: hii everyone, this is my first fic. Its based by this tumblr i post while ago and, after the pool had like 94% of yes i decided to post it. I'm not really good ad writing so i'm sorry, i wrote it in my first language then translate it helping me with translator so i hope it made justice to the story even if i tried to correct it after (english is not my first language!!!). The story is based on how Italian school works, people here is kinda free at school (and mostly of the teen smoke, me too), I hope you'll like it, thank you all!! (btw amo is like bro for female friends here in Italy).
⟶comments, feedbacks, reblog and repost sincerely valued
⟶my inbox is open for thoughts and feedback (please let me know!!)
⟶ not much proofread sorry, imagine the convo being in italian, but for obvious reasons i had to write it in English ⋆˚꩜。
The raindrops are wetting your hood while you are complaining for the bus that is late like always, “There’s no way that even-“ you start thinking in your mind, but before you can curse those damn public services…he’s here, looking like he just woke up but still so damn fine.
Martin, yes THAT guy, the one that your friends hate, the one that kept you awake at night for forever, the same guy that you haven’t seen since the school finished in June.
He hasn’t changed much since the last time you saw him, maybe he is a bit taller if it could be possible. His hair was still kinda blonde, perhaps a bit lightened by the summer sun, and styled as if they didn't matter, even if you know well how much time he spent for them to come like this. He’s wearing jeans, probably vintage and which he had bragged about at least 30 times to his friends. So baggy that the only thing keeping them onto him is a tight shoelace that still left them sagging.
He seems to have forgotten that it could rain even at the beginning of September, in fact he has on only a blue sweatshirt, light and without a hood; he only has a hat to cover his head, one of those you used to pretend to hate because they made him look a bit stupid but also 10 times finer.
You see him look up from his phone and meet your gaze, "what will Miriam think about it " you think as you see that with the usual smirk he approaches you looking down at you.
The thought of what your friends would say if you returned to that doom loop makes you close your eyes for a second as you start brooding over everything that happened.
“Don’t text him again, amo” the words of your best friend Miriam come back to you, along with all the tears you shed because of a stupid little guy.
You open your eyes because of that annoying noise that comes from the bus that has finally arrived, you realize that there is no one next to you anymore, not even Martin, that probably has already got on the bus; you get on quickly and, even if you haven't even arrived at school yet, you can't wait to go home.
“GIRL YOU ARE BACK” you hear behind you and two arms squeeze you making you stumble back a bit. "MIRIAM" you scream, turning towards her and holding her tight. You both go and sit at your usual step of the stairs outside your classroom. While you wait to get into school, the girl starts telling you all new school gossip, "Surprising how school hasn't started yet and people are already have so much shit to say" you reply by lighting up your cigarette and staying to listen to your friend.
By 7.50 AM the whole girl-group had arrived, everyone was ready to tell about their summer, the guys they had dated and the places they had visited, but you were there, standing still, listening to them without being able to help but look at him. Martin was sitting on one of those picnic tables in the school garden, laughing with his friends while the smoke of a cigarette, which he had just stolen from one of them, came out of his mouth.
“Are you here?” Amalia asks you;
Yes, you were listening to her, and yes, you had understood that the guy she had a story with, this summer had been a total asshole, but in this moment you can’t care less about it, and you hate to admit that. “Yeah sorry Ammy” you tell her while you look away from that damn group of friends returning to the conversation, “Amo, what were you looking at?” Your friend asks you “Nothing” you answer curtly looking at your feet and hoping she didn’t notice who you were looking at, “Ah, so now nothing is the new name of Martin Edwards?” She teases you.
At the sound of that name the other 3 girls turns their head towards the table where he and his group were, trying not to seem too obvious but having the completely opposite effect, as soon as they turn back towards you, their expressions seems to mean only “are you for real girl?”.
“Raga, I swear, nothing happened, absolutely nothing” you justify yourself, raising your arms and letting the cigarette’s ash fall to the ground, “amo, are you-“ starts Miriam, but before she can even say anything about you and Martin, you get save by the bell.
This is really first time in your life that you are truly happy to go into class.
“Teachers can’t even spare us on the first day” is the first thing you say when the break bell rings, “not even 3 hours have passed and my brain has already stopped collecting information” you continue while you and Miriam walk through the school corridors, trying to hear each other over the buzz of the other students.
“MIRIAMMMM” you both hear someone shout from one of the classrooms overlooking the hallway, “Finally the trio is complete” your friend replies rolling her eyes while Thomas hugs you, forgetting how strong his arms are, “you’re…killing…me…Tommy” you tell him in a choked voice, while you squirm trying to catch your breath.
“Sorry, cucciola” he replies, letting you go, “Santo cielo, I missed you so much” the boy says, “I have so many things to tell you, starting from the guy I was with in June, to what I found when I was in Rome…” he continues counting on his fingers what seem to be the boys he dated this summer, “yeah ok, but let’s go to the bathroom” Miriam snaps.
Even though school had just started, the bathroom already smelled of smoke, and you hated it, even if you were the first to hide there when you needed a cigarette, like now. You lock yourselves in the stall, and you almost get stabbed by Thomas’s elbow. He takes up at least half of the space, so you have to squash yourself against the wall to no risk your entire life every time he gestures in his usual wild way.
While he talks, Thomas fills the air with the smell of blueberry ice lemonade, or one of those crazy and kinda nauseating flavour. You light your usual cigarette, typical of your breaks, and the cubicle fills with a smell that would be disgusting if you weren’t already used to it.
“So do you remember Matteo?” Thomas asks while the smoke comes out of his mouth. “How could we not remember him? You wrote about him five hundred times in the groupchat, Thomas. We got it” Miriam answers while she steals the blue vape from his hands and starts smoking it.
Thomas starts a twisted spiral of gossip and drama that were part of his summer, updating you in real life to see your reactions, as he had already hinted in the chat.
You get lost watching the ash of the cigarette fall into the toilet, it’s the same brand he used to smoke before deciding to quit to, quote, “have a better voice”. You curse yourself because your mind drifts away from your friend’s speech and, again, goes to him.
Miriam pulls you out of your trance, shaking you slightly and motioning for you to be quiet with a finger on her lips to listen to the voices from the next stall, where, shortly before, three girls had gone in. The talk is muffled but you can still clearly hear excited shrills and voices: “This year he’s mine, he already liked two of my insta stories” one of the girls tells her friends who beg her to show them the notification, “I can’t believe it, THE Martin Edwards liked your story”.
Your heart sinks, while Miriam grabs your arm, squeezing it harder and harder, her typical reflex when she’s this close to being able to kill someone. You decide to get up, you want to leave and not hear anything else but they start again “Wasn’t he going out with that girl… what’s her name? The one from fourth year I think?” asks a lower, almost doubtful voice. “No way, Martin told me the other night in DM. Apparently it was a no feelings thing. He told me they’re done now.” A chorus of giggles explodes beyond the wall. “Poor girl, if she knew she’d die.”
You feel Thomas’s and Miriam’s eyes on you, they’re probably waiting for a reaction, but you show nothing. Slowly you open the bathroom door, go out throwing the cigarette butt in the trash can and walk to your classroom.
As soon as you sit at your desk the world falls on you: “A thing without feelings? is that all I am?” you ask yourself staring out the window while your teacher keeps explaining that useless physics rules.
Those evenings in the dark garden, breathing heavily because of the damp summer air and the secrets told out loud weren’t things that didn’t require feelings, right? Those entire days spent together before he left for Canada for his summer vacation, didn’t they mean anything to him either? You can’t concentrate and you pray that the teacher will answer you yes when you ask if you can go to the bathroom.
You go out and it feels like you can quite breathe again, you quickly walk to the bathroom to find again a bit of the comfort you’re used to.
You splash your face with cold water trying not to let the mascara run even though you can’t be sure, because mirrors at school are only something we can dream of; you turn around with your eyes closed and lean against the sink trying to slow your breath. You calm down and you get mentally ready to go back to class but as soon as you open your eyes, from the cubicle in front of you, someone too familiar comes out.
It must be a joke of fate, it can’t be real, you think while Martin notices your presence and offers you one of his usual little smiles that would have made you melt in an instant, if you didn’t remember what an asshole he is.
“Buongiorno, eh” he tells you, tilting his head to the side like he has done every time since “this” started, “Don’t we say ciao anymore?” He continues ironically.
You try to suppress the butterflies in your stomach, you can't let him win this time.
“Ciao” you answer him, curt and cold, maybe not as bitchy as you had tried to be. His face changes expression in a second, he looks… worried? No, you push this idea out of your mind, you know very well that he doesn't really care about you, your friends tells you every time.
He takes a step towards you, “Everything ok? You seem… strange.” He asks you while reaching out a hand, as if to brush your arm, a gesture that until a month ago would have been as natural as breathing.
You move away with a snap and the contact with the sink hurts your lower back, you wouldn't have survived his touch. Sourly you raise your voice a bit and finally look him in the eyes: “Why do you care so much? There are no feelings between us, right?”. He doesn't answer, he’s confused, you’ve never acted like this; he observes you but doesn't know how to act, slowly he puts his hand back in his pocket and draws his usual weapon: “What? Did you wake up on the wrong side of the bed today?” here it is again, he makes you look like you’re exaggerating, like always.
“No Martin, I didn't wake up on the wrong side of the bed, it’s just that ,at school, rumors are really fast, you know? ” you reply with a condescending tone, wishing to be anywhere but trapped in that bathroom with him.
“Let’s hear what I supposedly did” he says almost chuckling, keeping his eyes fixed on you, while he leans on a side to throw in the bin the cigarette butt he had just finished; while he was in the bathroom alone. You walk past him towards the bathroom stall ignoring the question, you slam the door and sit on the toilet lid and, in a second, you light your cigarette.
You needed it, you HAVE to calm down.
As soon as you take the first drag, the door opens and, as if it were automatic your roll your eyes, exhausted by that conversation.
Martin refuses to leave you like this and to stay with those doubts without even have understood clearly what happened, “Come on, tell me what I did?” He says, looking truly worried even though you can't help but think it's all a show.
“Mhhh, I don't know” you say shrugging. Releasing the smoke from your mouth “Maybe, liking bikini pics of other girls, texting them that these 2 years of back and forth with me meant nothing and that we ended everything without me even knowing isn't a great move, isn’t it?” you say sardonic all in one breath, taking a weight off your chest.
You had done it, you had said what you wanted, and finally you find the courage to raise your eyes and look at him.
Martin doesn’t look defeated, not even guilty, while you try to understand his look his voice interrupts you “are you serious?” He asks you, returning you the tone you were using with him “You’re joking right?”.
You look at him confused, what is he saying, why does he even have the courage to think such a thing? Why isn't he repenting for what he did? Before you can even open your mouth Martin starts: “Scusami, but I’m not the one who didn't reach out for the whole fucking summer!” He says raising his voice, a bit stunned by your reactions and equally disappointed by your behavior. “But what does that mean…” you say with a lower voice, almost stammering.
You’re left speechless, you can't let yourself be defeated, he won't win this time, so you try to pretend to be proud and firm, even if his words have confused you.
You don't stop to reflect and you let the cigarette ash fall to the ground while the smoke comes out of your mouth: “As soon as you set foot back in Italy, you didn't worry much about texting another girl, right? I always knew you didn't ever give a damn about me” you finish while you try to escape his gaze.
Martin feels like he just got stabbed, it’s not true that he didn't care, maybe you were the person he cared about the most, but he can't let himself look weak, not here at school, not in front of you. He was still a 17-year-old boy, he hasn't yet learned to be the first to say sorry. He clinches his jaw and dryly replies “Look, I wanted to say hi and see if you were still alive after the whole summer, since surely you must have had something better to do than text me” his tone is cold, almost disdainful; he looks at his feet and closes the door concluding with a detached “Ci vediamo”.
You finish your cigarette with trembling hands, staring at the door Martin had just closed and leaning your head against the wall behind you.
“I’m not the one who didn't reach out for the whole summer”
The words stayed suspended in your mind, he hadn't text you either, it couldn't have been a misunderstanding, you couldn't both have been so stupid, so proud, so afraid of disappointment that you refused to send a single first message.
You convince yourself that it’s all so fucking stupid and that Martin is the usual guy ready to blame you for everything he had done, like Miriam's ex and the myriad of assholes Thomas had told you about.
You can’t accept the thought that, while you were staring at the screen waiting for a signal from Canada, he was doing exactly the same thing on the other side of the world and that maybe… you are just as guilty as him.
You wake up from your thoughts only when your hand touches the door handle of your classroom, you had been away for at least 15 minutes, but surely Miriam would have told the teacher you were sick or some similar bullshit.
Miriam, fuck Miriam, she must not know anything about this or she’ll start her telling-off on how guys are all pieces of shit and how you should never trust any of them.
You take a long breath and go back into class, give a gentle smile at your friend, showing off your best acting skills, and sit at your desk. You spend the rest of the day pretending that your teachers' words are the most important things being said to you, you don't allow yourself to get distracted, to think about Martin and his look while you were in the bathroom.
At the break, Thomas tries to resume his talk about his summer flings, but you can't follow him, you apologize and go get a coffee at the vending machines. You drink it sitting on the courtyard wall, your gaze lost in space, while not far away you see Martin.
He is surrounded by his friends, laughing at someone's joke, and he seems so… normal and calm, as if that confrontation in the bathroom hadn't affected him at all. You start thinking again that what he told you was just a lie.
When the last bell rings you say a quick goodbye to Miriam and Thomas and run away with your headphones in your ears and the music so loud it drowns out your thoughts.
The journey back seems to have lasted 10 seconds, you don't even remember how you made it to the lunch table with the latest episode of your favorite series playing on the computer and a nice plate of pasta in front of you. You eat and spend the rest of the afternoon trying to distract yourself, watching a dozen YouTube videos and spending at least 2 hours on TikTok, skipping every video with even a slightly sad song.
Around 7 PM, just before dinner, you tell your parents that you are going out and that you'll be home by 8. You leave the house and suddenly you let the air of that cold September day refresh your face, you sit on a bench without taking off your headphones, which have been playing the same playlist for at least 40 minutes. You light a cigarette but regret it immediately after: that smell reminds you of him.
It's the same one that stayed on both of yours clothes when you spent hours talking. It reminds you of him, the way he tilted his head to protect the lighter's flame from the wind and the way he looked at you through the smoke.
How stupid you feel.
Martin is just a few hundred meters from here, yet he seems so unreachable.
His words come back to mind and you lose control of your thoughts, they wonder if the girl in the bathroom was just a way not to think about how much your absence hurt him, that maybe his friends also called you a bitch the same amount of time yours did with him.
You don't want to fight anymore, you don't want to be right anymore. You just wish time would go back to before Canada, but maybe it's too late now to fix everything.
"You're not very nice, huh? Just like me…” the protagonist of “Whisper of the Heart” says while talking to that kitten.
It must be the thousandth time you’ve rewatched this movie, but every time it makes you feel calm and lost in that world; you don't notice it's already 1:45 AM and that, if you have school tomorrow and don't want to look like a zombie, you should go to sleep.
You turn off the computer and put it on the nightstand, fix the blankets so they are laid out just the way you like them and grab your phone to put it on charge. You check that the alarms for tomorrow are on and the moment you put it on the nightstand, on top of the computer, the screen lights up.
You grab it curiously, it will surely be the 30th video Miriam sent you on TikTok, but you decide to check anyway.
MARS (istg non sei tanto più alto di me) 😔
BRAVI A CADRE - I polmoni spotifylink/intl-it/track/3me7fQdjgO8NHscb3xPaBa
01:47
mi manchi
01:47
dividers by @uzmacchiato
⟶feedbacks, reblog and repost sincerely valued ⟶if you liked there's another thing i wrote, hope you'll enjoy it (come back to me- RM)