This tattoo on my left hand; Is turning ------- purple-ish blue; Daydreams of the romance; ---------- Daydreams of you; My pretty woman in a ballgown; I'm Richard Gere in a tux; Getting married in a -------- courthouse; Writing vows in a rush; Making --------- out before the judge; With my ---------- teenage wife 。 。 。
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My name is Nour, I’m 18 years old. I once dreamed of becoming a doctor—to help people, to heal, to bring hope. I studied hard and believed that education was my way out😭.
But the war took everything.💔
In a single moment, my home was destroyed. Everything I loved—my books, my memories, my dreams—was buried under rubble.😭😭💔💔
Now, I live with my family in a torn tent. It doesn’t protect us from the cold or the burning heat. We have no food, no clean water, no safety—nothing.😭😭💔💔
Every night we sleep not knowing what tomorrow will bring: a chance at life… or more pain.🍉🍉
My mother is elderly and needs care. I used to dream of helping others, but today I can’t even help my own family.💔🍉
I’m reaching out to every kind heart reading this: please, help us. Any amount, any support, means the world.🙏🙏💔🍉
Your kindness could help us survive… and maybe, one day, I’ll return to school and chase my dream again.❤️
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Hello, my friend Nour need's your help, now to survive war, displacement, and fa… Clara Marino needs your support for Help Nour's Family in
To donate or contact: [Insert your donation link or contact info here
Be our voice in a world that’s forgotten us. Be the light in our darkness.❤️
hihi guysss so, im trying to create a series for Husband!Jake !! just like the ColdHusband Riki Series. so if you have anyyy suggestions on how the husband jake series should be like, the background or just the story, pls comment bellow or send an ask !! tysmm
nd dww cold husband riki series willl continuee, new part dropping sooooooon
hihi, i took some time offfffff of blr like usualll cause ive been dealing with examss but now its summer breakkkkk soooooooo, imm going to get to start writing! stay tuneddd ppl
do you have any recs/any aus about mafia-enhypen x childish wife-reader?
hmm its been quite some time since i got this ask but im so sorry, i dont have any recs for that kind of trope! if anyone knows, drop it in the comments for them?
in which you and jay are forced to take care of a fake baby for a week.
pairing: football player!jay x fem!reader
wc: 19.4k
cw: high school au, strangers to friends to lovers, forced proximity, themes of academic stress/pressure, a tiny bit of jealousy once, one kiss, mentions of multiple idols, reader is implied to be a year younger than jay, rivals to ?? (secondary characters), friendship dynamics, strong language.
warnings: none, it's all fluff!
a/n: happy jay day! i can't believe he's turning 24, time flies! <3 so, as a gift, i wanted to write a little (or not so little) something for you. i had so much fun writing this, so i hope you'll enjoy it as much as i did!
the bell had barely stopped ringing when ms. choi clapped her hands twice, the sound sharp enough to cut through the usual friday afternoon chatter.
“alright, everyone settle down. this is for both juniors and seniors today. phones away.”
you slide a little lower in your seat, already sensing something painful is about to happen. the shared class period with the seniors had always been a mixed bag — sometimes interesting, sometimes just loud. but today it feels different, almost… dangerous.
ms. choi smiles like she's about to hand out candy, and that's when you know. something big is coming. she may fool others with that sweet smile, but you know better than that.
every time she uses that smile, every time she has that glimpse in her eyes… it means trouble. she's known not only for being a great teacher, but also for her love for “life skills” projects. she always does one. she has done one ever since you started high school. every. single. year.
you can just cross your fingers and hope for the best.
“dear students, this semester we’re doing the baby project,” you hear a loud sigh coming from the back. she rolls her eyes, a little smile on her lips. “yes, mr. kang, the one you’ve all heard horror stories about. you’ll be paired randomly across grade levels. and you'll be given one electronic doll per pair. it cries, it needs feeding, changing, burping, playing — on a completely random schedule, including nights and weekends. just like a real baby,” she explains as she walks around the class. “you’ll keep a shared digital logbook. your combined grade depends on how well you cooperate and how high the doll’s health score stays by sunday night next week.”
“but ms. choi,” yunjin starts, raising her hand. “we're so busy! the drama club is starting rehearsals on monday, and it's 2 hours every day. how can i take care of the baby if i'm supposed to be singing?“
“yeah, same with the debate club. we're going on a tournament next weekend.” sunoo adds.
“and what about the football team?” jay, one of the seniors sitting on the back, cuts in, leaning back in his chair but clearly tense. “nationals are in three weeks. scouts are going to be there.” he exhales, running a hand through his hair. “if i mess that up, i can kiss my scholarship goodbye.”
then, the chaos starts. everybody is talking. there are so many voices in the room you can't even tell what they're saying.
ms. choi claps her hands once, sharp enough to cut through the noise. “alright, alright — everyone, that’s enough.”
the room slowly quiets. she softens her expression slightly.
“you’re all proving my point for me. you’re busy, stressed, juggling a hundred things… welcome to real life, where responsibilities don’t wait until it’s convenient. this is exactly why you’re doing this project. life doesn’t pause when things get busy,” she continues. “you learn how to manage responsibility alongside everything else.” she gestures toward the class. “and just to remind you — this is a paired assignment. so instead of complaining to me, start discussing how you’re going to handle it with your partner.”
yunjin opens his mouth, ready to say something.
“no 'but's,'” she cuts her. “my decision is done. now, let's go with the pairs!”
a collective groan rolls through the room. someone in the back actually whispers “please no.”
ms. choi ignores it and picks up the small bowls of folded papers.
“again, the pairs will be randomly assigned. one junior, one senior. and before you ask, mr. sim, no, there won't be changes accepted.”
“but mr. choi,” you hear jake, one of the seniors, speak. “i'm sure sunghoon and i would make great parents! look at us, handsome, funny, and very good at ta—”
then there's a loud sound, like a smack on the back of his head. then an “ouch!” coming from jake's mouth.
“seems like mr. park. doesn't agree,” ms. choi laughs, shaking her head. “let's keep going then. now, please, when i call your name, come sit with your partner at the front tables so we can go over the rules together.”
your stomach twists. you hate the idea of group projects. even more if you can't go with one of your friends. even more if you have to interact with a senior, as you don't know any of them personally. you glance sideways at kazuha, who is already giving you a sympathetic look from two seats away.
you watch ms. choi rummaging through the papers of each bowl. then, names started getting called.
“kim sunoo and kang taehyun.”
“nakamura kazuha and kim gaeul”
“huh yunjin and park sunghoon.”
you gasp, and yunjin’s eyes go wide.
park sunghoon is the captain of the football team, the 'popular guy.' he's the acclaimed king of the whole school. he's everything, and he can get everything he wants — for example, permission to celebrate private football events at the the covered courtyard behind the school. and yunjin, the president of the drama club, who had been trying to convince the director for months to be able to perform the christmas play at that exact same spot, can't stand him. at all.
you mouth “good luck” at her while she stands up, shoulders squared like she's heading into battle.
then, more names.
you don't pay attention to them. you just glance around the room, making a quick mental list of every single senior who hasn't been named yet.
you see ningning, one of the head cheerleaders. she isn't exactly mean — in fact, she gifted you her lipstick once, saying 'it suited you better' — but she just doesn't talk too much with others outside her friend group. there's jisung, known for being the president of the dance club. he's charismatic, and, according to yunjin who once shared a class with him, very responsible. he'd make a good partner, you think. even tsuki, the bubbly girl from the art club would be a better partner than some irresponsible football player who only thinks about running behind a ball!
but you hear your name, and time stops.
and then—
“…and park jongseong.”
your heart drops straight to your shoes.
park jongseong.
known as jay.
you know the name, of course. everyone does. senior. football player. not the captain — that's sunghoon — but still one of the core guys. tall, dark hair that always looks a little messy after practice, quiet confidence that makes him stand out without trying. he's sitting two rows behind you, same aisle. you have never once spoken to him. not a single word in your entire high school career.
you hear the scrape of a chair behind you. then footsteps.
when you turn, jay is already walking toward the front tables, hands in the pockets of his school jacket. his expression is calm, almost neutral, unfaced, but you catch the tiniest furrow between his brows. like he's processing the same information you are.
ms. choi points at the two empty seats side by side.
“go ahead and sit together.”
you stand up on autopilot, legs feeling a little unsteady. when you reach the table, jay is already there, pulling out the chair next to his. he doesn’t say anything at first — just gives you a small nod.
you sit.
up close he smells faintly like fresh laundry and the mint gum he probably chewed between classes. his knee accidentally bumps yours under the table and he pulls it back quickly.
“uh… hi,” he says, voice low so only you could hear. “i’m jongseong. but you can call me jay.”
you swallow.
“i know,” you answer, then immediately regret how that sounded. “i mean— hi, nice to meet you.”
he gives you a tiny half-smile, the kind that doesn’t quite reach his eyes. “nice to meet you, too.” he pauses, staring at you.
after some seconds, you realize he's waiting for you to introduce yourself. “shit, sorry,” you laugh and tell him your name.
when she finishes making the pairs, ms. choi starts explaining the rules to the whole group again, but you can barely focus. the doll will be handed out first thing monday morning. you and jay will have to figure out a schedule for who takes it home each night. the logbook has to be updated every single time the baby needs care — with timestamps and who did what. if the doll’s “health” drops too low, it affects both your grades. no exceptions, even for football practice or club activities.
“cooperation is the whole point,” ms. choi says cheerfully. “this isn’t about being perfect parents. it’s about learning how to work with someone you might not know.”
you risk a glance at jay. he's listening, jaw set, fingers tapping once against the table. when ms. choi finishes and tells everyone they can talk with their partners for the last ten minutes of class, he turns toward you.
“so… we’re doing this,” he says, almost like he's confirming it to himself.
“yeah,” you breathe. “looks like it.”
an awkward silence stretches for two whole seconds.
“i can take it— well, him? her? i don't know, the baby,” you both laugh. “friday night and saturday next week if you want,” he offers. “i have a game on sunday morning, so i can give you the baby then.”
you nod a little too fast. “that works. i can do sunday night. no problem.”
“cool.”
another pause.
“i think i’ve never actually talked to you before,” he admits quietly, rubbing the back of his neck. “sorry if this is weird.”
“it’s okay. i haven’t talked to you either.”
he lets out a short laugh under his breath. “great. we’re starting from zero then.”
the bell rings before either of you could say anything else.
you stand up quickly, slinging your bag over your shoulder. jay does the same, hesitating for half a second like he wants to say more, but then just gives you another small nod.
“see you monday, then.”
“yeah… see you monday, jay.”
you practically run outside the classroom.
the second you step into the hallway, yunjin is already waiting, kazuha and sunoo right behind her like backup.
“oh my god,” yunjin says, eyes sparkling with pure chaos. “you got paired with jay? that jay? senior football jay? he’s on the team with sunghoon, right? you know how much i hate that cocky, arrogant guy. and now i have to deal with him for a whole week because of this stupid doll.” she sighs. “he’s probably going to act like the baby is beneath him or something. i swear if he tries to boss me around i’m going to lose it.”
sunoo grabs your arm, practically bouncing. “i've heard he’s so handsome up close, is that right? did he smell good? tell me he smelled good. but also — taehyun already told me we’re both screwed. he said he doesn’t know the first thing about taking care of a baby, and that we are going to tank the grade if the doll starts crying during his football practice or something.”
“you looked like you were about to pass out when ms. choi called your names.” kazuha is quieter, but her lips are twitching into a smile. “for my part… at least gaeul seems really nice — she’s super calm and organized. we were already talking about making a schedule right away. she even offered to take the first night so i can finish my dance practice.”
you groan, covering your face with both hands. “i literally never talked to him before today. he said ‘hi i’m jay’ like we were meeting for the first time at a funeral. and now i have to figure out nights and weekends with a senior who’s worried about scouts and nationals.”
yunjin laughs loudly. “this is going to be the best week of my life. you should’ve seen sunghoon when he realized it was me. he looked traumatized. good. he deserves it after stealing the courtyard spot from drama club twice.”
the four of you start walking toward the lockers, your friends still peppering you with questions.
meanwhile, on the other side of the building, jay is leaning against the wall outside the senior lockers while his friends immediately swarm him.
jake throws an arm around his shoulders, grinning like an idiot. “dude. you got paired with that quiet junior girl. she seems normal enough.”
“you better get along with her, man. nationals are in three weeks and scouts are coming,” sunghoon raises an eyebrow, arms crossed. “you can’t afford to lose points on some dumb project. if that doll messes with your sleep or makes you miss extra training, your scholarship is on the line.”
taehyun smirks, leaning against the locker. “exactly. i already told sunoo we’re both screwed if you don’t figure out how to keep that thing quiet during practice. coach is not going to care that you’re playing house.”
jay shoves jake’s arm off, but there’s no real heat in it. his ears are a little red.
“shut up. it’s just a project. we’re not even friends. she seems… normal. nice, i guess. i’ll just make a schedule and get through it. i can’t let this mess with training.”
“still,” sunghoon says, more serious now, “make it work with her. we need you sharp for nationals. don’t blow the scholarship over a fake baby.”
jay rolls his eyes, but the corner of his mouth twitches. “you guys are the worst. it's just a doll. it can't be that bad, can it?”
still, as he walks toward the parking lot for practice, he can’t stop replaying the short conversation in his head — the way you’d looked a little nervous but tried to play it cool, the soft way you’d said his name.
he shakes the thought away.
it's just a week taking care of a fake baby.
nothing more.
-------
MONDAY. DAY 1:
the alarm on your phone goes off way too early, but you are already wide awake, stomach twisting with nerves. monday morning. baby project day one. you stare at your reflection in the bathroom mirror while brushing your teeth, trying to convince yourself it's just a stupid doll. nothing to freak out about. you grab your bag, double-check you have a charger and your notebook, and head to school.
the hallways are louder than usual — everyone buzzing about the pairings from friday. you spot sunoo waving frantically from across the corridor, but you only manage a weak smile before slipping into ms. choi’s classroom.
the seats have been rearranged overnight. instead of the usual rows, there are double desks pushed together. a small sign on the board reads “sit with your assigned partner — no exceptions.”
your eyes find jay immediately. he's already at the desk near the middle, one leg stretched out, scrolling on his phone. his hair looks a little damp from morning practice, and he's wearing the school hoodie with his jersey number on the sleeve. when he notices you, he straightens up and gives you a small nod.
you slide into the seat next to him, bag dropping to the floor with a soft thud.
“good morning, partner,” he says quietly, voice still rough from sleep or maybe from shouting on the field earlier.
“morning,” you reply, fiddling with the strap of your bag. “ready for this?”
“not even a little.” he lets out a short laugh, rubbing the back of his neck. “are you?”
“i barely slept. i kept imagining the baby crying at 3 a.m. and my mom killing me.”
before he can answer, ms. choi walks in carrying a stack of papers and a large box that definitely has the babies inside.
“good morning, parents,” she announces cheerfully. the whole class groans. “yes, i said parents. you’re sitting with your partners because today we start officially. first, fill out this information sheet together. it helps you treat the project seriously. you need to know your child before taking care of them.”
she passes the sheets down the rows. you take one and lay it flat between you and jay.
the questions are exactly as expected, printed in neat black ink:
fill out the birth certificate!
1. name of the parents:
2. is your baby male or female?
3. what is their name?
4. how did you pick out the name?
5. include a picture of the baby with each parent!
jay leans closer to read it, his shoulder brushing yours for a second. “okay… so we need a name. any ideas?”
you shrug, trying not to overthink how close he is. “i don’t know. something simple? like… minjun if it’s a boy, or jiwoo if it’s a girl?”
he nods slowly. “jiwoo sounds nice. easy to say when it’s screaming and crying at midnight.”
you both laugh a little, the sound awkward but genuine.
ms. choi starts handing out the dolls one pair at a time. each comes in a soft gray carrier with adjustable straps and a small blanket tucked inside. when she reaches your desk, she places the carrier in front of jay.
“here you go. treat her gently.”
the second the doll leaves ms. choi’s hands, it lets out a loud, realistic wail — high-pitched and demanding.
jay’s eyes go wide. “holy shit—”
he fumbles with the carrier, nearly knocking it over. you react fast, reaching over and gently lifting the doll out. its tiny plastic face scrunched up, mouth open in another cry. you rock it automatically, the way you saw in those parenting videos online over the weekend.
“shh, it’s okay,” you murmur, bouncing it lightly against your shoulder. the crying stops after a few seconds, leaving only soft cooing sounds from the speaker inside.
jay stares at you, impressed and a little relieved. “you’re good at that.”
“i have a cousin who’s two. lots of practice.” you carefully place the doll back in the carrier, adjusting the blanket. “your turn next time it cries, though.”
he gives you a mock salute. “yes, ma’am.”
ms. choi claps to get everyone’s attention again. “now, while you fill out the sheet, i’ll go over the basics. you must bring the baby to class every single day. you also need to cover the basics. feeding: there’s a bottle in the carrier. hold it at the right angle or the sensor won’t register. diapers: the back panel opens — velcro, very simple. burping: pat the back firmly but gently after feeding. the doll will let you know when it’s done. and, in case you were thinking about it, no, mr. sim, the baby is neither a football ball nor a maraca,” some students laugh. “you can't shake it, play with it, or whatever strange things you're thinking about. you'll lose points for that.”
“what if it doesn't stop crying?” kazuha asks.
“well, you can try a lot of things for that! babies get sleepy, hungry, gassy… you never know! you can also try to get others to stop the crying,” she walks as she explains. “however, if it's too much and you just can't stop it, there's a hidden button on the battery's case. if you press it, the baby will shut down completely. however, it'll mean the project is over, and you'll be penalized for that.”
you look at the baby in the carrier. you don't exactly need a good grade, but it'd help you with . a lot. and, according to what jay mentioned the other day, he needs to get his scholarship. and that involves his grades. so… yeah, shutting the baby down early isn't an option.
“any questions?” ms. choi looks around the class.
sunghoon raises his hand from the back. yunjin, by his side, scofs as she tries to calm the baby. “what if it cries during nationals warm-up?”
ms. choi smiles sweetly. “then you learn to multitask, mr. park. life doesn’t stop for football. and miss huh won't be there to help you all the time.”
jay mutters under his breath, “great. exactly what i needed.”
you both turn back to the sheet, grabbing a pen.
you write down your names as the parents' names.
2. is your baby male or female? female
3. what is his/her name? jiwoo
4. how did you pick out the name? we wanted something simple and easy to say when she’s crying at 3 a.m. and we want to bury her in our backyards
you laugh as jay writes. “you can't say that! we're supposed to be loving, responsible parents!” he hands you his pen. you cross it and write down:
5. how did you pick out the name? we wanted something simple and easy to say when she’s crying at 3 a.m. and we want to bury her in our backyards it just felt right
6. include a picture of the baby with each parent!
jay pulls out his phone. “we should take the pictures now so we don’t forget.”
you nod. he holds the carrier between you while you both lean in. the first photo is awkward — you look tense, jay’s smile is too forced. the second picture comes out better: you are smiling softly at the doll, and jay has relaxed, one hand resting on the edge of the carrier like he's already protecting it.
“that one’s good, way better. we look more… parent-like,” he says, showing you the screen. his thumb hovers near your shoulder in the frame.
you feel your cheeks warm. “yeah. send it to me later? so i can print it out and all that.”
“sure, no problem.”
ms. choi continues explaining the logbook app everyone had to download on friday. “update it every single time. who fed, who changed, how long it took. wednesday’s class will be a parent support group — each pair shares one challenge and one win from the first days. be honest.”
the rest of the period passes in a blur of demonstrations. you practice feeding jiwoo with the bottle while jay times it. he changes the first pretend diaper, cursing softly when the doll makes a fussy sound halfway through. by the end, both of you are laughing more than you expected.
when the bell rings, you pack up quickly. jay lifts the carrier.
“i’ll take her first period. you can have her after lunch. is that okay?”
“sounds good.”
you both head for the door. the second you step into the hallway, jiwoo starts crying again — louder this time, like she's testing you.
“oh no—” jay shifts the carrier, trying to rock it while walking. some students turn their heads to stare at both of you.
you took over, bouncing her gently. “shh, jiwoo, it’s okay. we’re right here.”
the crying doesn’t stop. you and jay end up standing against the lockers for a full five minutes, taking turns rocking and patting her back. by the time she quiets, the hallway is almost empty.
“we’re late,” you say, checking your phone.
jay grimaces. “yeah. coach is gonna kill me if this happens during practice later. come on — i’ll walk you to your next class.”
you end up sitting together again in the shared second-period room. you hold the carrier the entire time, heart racing every time jiwoo makes even the smallest sound. jay keeps glancing over, ready to help, but the doll stays quiet. his friends who also share this class — jake and taehyun — are sitting a few rows back and keep whispering jokes you can’t quite hear, but jay shoots them a glare that shuts them up.
lunch is the real test.
you decide to have lunch together. “just in case the baby decides to cry more,” jay says.
you find an empty table near the windows. jay sets the carrier between you, and you both stare at the food on your trays like it's a peace offering.
“so,” he starts, poking at his rice, “how’s your morning been besides the crying?”
“terrifying. i kept thinking she was going to start during the quiz in history.”
he chuckles. “same. i had her during math and she made this little whimper right when i was solving an equation on the board. the whole class turned around.”
before you can reply, jake walks closer, sunghoon and kai trailing behind.
“look at the happy little family,” jake teases, leaning on the table. “jay, you holding up okay? or is the scholarship already crying?”
sunghoon smirks, arms crossed. “don’t drop her during practice, man. coach said no excuses.”
“she’s cute though. jiwoo, right? suits her. loud like you on the field.” kai grins.
jay rolls his eyes but there's no real annoyance. “go away. we’re trying to eat.”
your friends appear seconds later. yunjin slides into the seat next to you, carrying her own baby, eyeing the boys warily.
“everything okay here?” she asks, voice loud enough for them to hear. “need me to scare them off?” she grins. “by the way, sunghoon, sunghoon jr. says he wants his dad to change his diaper. right now.”
“the baby can't even ta—”
“i said right now.” yunjin's expression is serious. sunghoon rolls his eyes but takes the carrier. “he says 'thanks, daddy!'” she smirks.
kazuha sits more gracefully, glancing at the carrier with soft eyes. “she’s quiet now. good job. gaeul has our baby, so i'm off-duty. for now.”
sunoo plops down across from you, already pulling out his phone. “can i take a picture for the group chat? you two look like exhausted parents already.”
“sunoo, no.” you groan, trying to stop him.
but he snaps one anyway, jiwoo sleeping peacefully between you and jay.
the boys eventually wander off after more light teasing, leaving you and jay alone again with your friends hovering protectively nearby.
“they’re not that bad,” you say quietly once they were gone.
jay raises an eyebrow. “they’re idiots. but yeah… they mean well. they're mostly worried about nationals. scouts are coming, and i can’t afford to look sloppy because i’m sleep-deprived from a doll.”
you nod, understanding more than he probably realizes. “that makes sense. i… didn’t know the scholarship part was so serious.”
“it is. football is my way out — better college, better future. my dad travels all the time for work, so it’s mostly on me to make it happen.” he shrugs, but his eyes stay serious. “that’s why i was stressing in class on friday. if this project tanks my focus…”
“we’ll make it work,” you say softly. “i don’t want to mess it up for you either.”
he looks at you then — really looks, like he's trying to decipher something — and his expression softens. “thanks. most people would just complain about the extra work.”
the rest of the afternoon passes in a blur. after lunch, jay takes jiwoo to his remaining classes. you keep checking your phone for updates in the logbook app. he is surprisingly diligent — every feeding and diaper change logged with short notes like “took 8 minutes, she calmed down fast” or “almost dropped the bottle when jake scared me.”
when the final bell rings, you meet him by the main entrance. he is waiting with the carrier slung carefully over one shoulder, looking a little tired but steady.
“hey,” he says. “are you done for the day?”
“yeah.”
he hesitates then, shifting his weight. “look… i drove here today. my car is in the lot. if you want, i can give you a ride home. so you don’t have to take the baby on the bus. it’s probably loud and crowded.”
you blink, surprised. “really? you don’t mind?”
“not at all. plus, it gives us time to figure out the rest of the week’s schedule without rushing.”
you nod before you could overthink it. “okay. thank you.”
the walk to the parking lot is quiet at first. jay carries the carrier the whole way, checking on jiwoo every few steps. his car is a simple black sedan — nothing flashy, but clean inside. he opens the passenger door for you, then carefully places the carrier in the back seat, buckling it in like it was a real child.
once you are both settled and he starts the engine, the silence feels heavier.
“so,” he says after pulling out of the lot, “real talk. how are we actually doing this? i have practice every day after school until six or seven. sometimes later if coach is pushing us for nationals.”
you turn slightly in your seat to face him. “i can take her most school nights if you need to stay late. but weekends might be trickier. you have that sunday match, right?”
“yeah. early morning. i can do saturday daytime if you want the evening.”
you pull out your phone and open the notes app, making a quick shared schedule. “okay… you take friday night and saturday like we said. i’ll do sunday night. then we can switch off during the week depending on practice.”
he glances over at you, one hand on the wheel. “you’re really organized about this.”
“i overthink everything,” you admit with a small laugh. “plus, i don’t want to be the reason you lose sleep before scouts come.”
jay is quiet for a moment, eyes on the road. “i thought you’d be annoyed getting paired with some random football guy. most juniors don’t really talk to us.”
“i thought you’d be annoyed getting paired with a quiet junior who doesn’t know anything about football.”
he smiles at that — a real one this time, small but warm. “you’re not what i expected.”
“what did you expect?”
“someone who’d complain the whole time. or… try to flirt to make it less awkward.” he shrugs. “instead you’re just… calm. you calmed jiwoo down like it was nothing this morning.”
you feel your face heat up. “i was panicking inside.”
“it didn’t show.”
the conversation flows easier after that. he tells you about how he moved here four years ago, how football became his main focus because it gave him structure when his dad was always traveling. you share how your parents work long shifts, so you are used to handling things on your own. how your small friend group — yunjin, kazuha, sunoo — is basically your second family.
“yunjin’s already plotting how to survive sunghoon,” you say, laughing. “she keeps saying he’s going to act like the baby is a football he can just hand off.”
jay chuckles. “sunghoon’s actually decent when he’s not being captain mode. he’s just stressed too. we all are. scholarship stuff hits different when you’re the one who has to make it happen.”
you nod. “i get that. i’m not on any big path like that, but i still stress about grades and what comes after high school. this project feels like a sneak peek at how messy real life is.”
“exactly.” he pauses at a red light and looks over at you. “thanks for not making it weird. or at least… for making the weird parts manageable.”
“same. i thought you’d be all stuck-up jock energy. but you’re actually… nice. and you care about the project even if it’s because of football.”
he rubs the back of his neck again, a habit you are starting to notice. “yeah. can’t let a doll ruin my shot. but… it’s not just that anymore. it’s kind of fun figuring it out with you.”
the light turns green. he drives on, but the air in the car feels lighter somehow.
when he pulls up in front of your house, he parks but doesn’t unlock the doors right away.
“i’ll text you the log updates tonight if she wakes up. and… thanks for the ride. seriously.”
“anytime.” he reaches back and carefully hands you the carrier. jiwoo is sleeping soundly. “see you tomorrow.”
“see you tomorrow, jay.”
you step out, carrier in hand, and watch him drive away. your heart is beating a little faster than usual, but not from panic this time.
maybe this week won’t be so bad after all.
-------
TUESDAY. DAY 2:
the soft glow of your phone screen cuts through the darkness of your room at exactly 2:07 a.m. jiwoo’s cry blares through the speaker — sharp, insistent, and way too real for a plastic doll. you groan, rolling over and fumbling to grab her from the carrier beside your bed. your eyes are blurry, your hair is a mess, and every muscle protests as you sit up.
“shh, jiwoo, please,” you whisper, rocking her gently against your shoulder while you tap the feeding button on the app. the doll quiets for a few seconds, then starts up again. you try burping her next, patting her back with careful, practiced motions. it takes almost fifteen minutes before the crying finally stops and the logbook updates with a green checkmark.
you snap a quick screenshot of the timestamp and the note you type in — “2:12 a.m. — fed and burped, took 14 minutes, i handled it” — and send it to jay with a simple text.
you: jiwoo decided 2 a.m. was party time. screenshot attached. hope you’re sleeping better than me.
no reply. his status shows “last seen 11:47 p.m.” he is probably dead asleep after practice. you sigh, set the phone down, and try to drift off again, but jiwoo fusses twice more before your alarm finally goes off at 6:30 a.m. by the time you drag yourself out of bed, you feel like you have already lived a full day.
the morning air is crisp as you walk to school, carrier strapped across your chest like a tired parent. jiwoo stays mercifully quiet for the walk, but your eyes are heavy. you spot your friends near the main gate and wave weakly.
kazuha stands there first, her posture still graceful even with dark circles under her eyes and the carrier holding baby eunchae balanced on her hip. she offers you a small, exhausted smile.
“morning,” she says softly. “or… whatever this is.”
you let out a tired laugh. “exactly. jiwoo woke me at 2 a.m. and then again at 4. how’s eunchae?”
kazuha adjusts the blanket around her doll. “she was perfect until 3:30. gaeul texted me the whole time though. she said she'll take her tonight so we take turns. she’s really good at this. we even made a shared playlist of lullabies last night.”
sunoo appears next, practically dragging his feet, baby carrier slung over one shoulder like it weighs a thousand pounds. his usually bright face looks pale and puffy.
“taehyun is the worst,” he announces dramatically, flopping against the wall beside you. “he had the baby last night and barely slept. he texted me at 1 a.m. saying ‘how do you make it stop’ with like ten crying emojis. i had to walk him through feeding and burping over voice notes while half-asleep. this morning he looked like a zombie in the hallway and told me we’re both going to fail if this keeps up.”
you wince in sympathy. “at least he tried. jay didn’t even answer my text at 2 a.m. since he was probably dead asleep.”
yunjin storms up last, her carrier bouncing with every angry step. baby sunghoon jr. — he had insisted on the name yesterday just to annoy her — is tucked inside, quiet for once.
“that idiot sunghoon,” she starts immediately, voice rising. “he promised he’d meet me right at the school door this morning to take the baby for first period. i waited five whole minutes like an idiot while sunghoon jr. started fussing. nothing. no text, no sign of him. when i finally found him near the lockers he just shrugged and said ‘practice ran late, sorry.’ sorry? i had drama rehearsal notes to review! i’m so tired i could cry, and he’s acting like the baby is not a demonic object capable of breaking your eardrums.” she huffs, crossing her arms. “we’re supposed to be a team and he’s already dropping the ball. literally.”
kazuha places a gentle hand on yunjin’s shoulder. “i mean… at least you got through the night. gaeul and i split everything evenly. it actually felt… nice? like we were figuring it out together.”
sunoo nods, yawning widely. “taehyun kept apologizing in the chat this morning. he said he’ll take extra nights this week to make up for it. still, i feel like a single parent already.”
you adjust jiwoo’s blanket, smiling tiredly at their complaints. “jay at least offered to take her during his morning classes. but yeah… 2 a.m. hits different when you have to be functional by 8.”
the four of you stand there for a few more minutes, trading war stories like exhausted parents at a playground. yunjin keeps muttering threats about making sunghoon do all the night shifts, sunoo dramatically reenacts taehyun’s panicked voice notes, and kazuha quietly suggests making a group chat just for “surviving the project” tips. the conversation feels comforting in its shared misery, and for a moment the weight of the carrier on your chest feels a little lighter.
the morning classes drag. you sit with jay in mr. kim’s room, but he arrives a minute late, hair still messy from rushing. he slides into the seat beside you, eyes apologetic.
“sorry about last night,” he whispers as soon as mr. kim starts talking. “i crashed hard after evening practice. saw your text this morning — you handled it like a pro.”
you shrug, keeping your voice low. “it’s fine. she settled eventually. how did your night go?”
“pretty good, slept a lot. but… i took care of everything on the app. when you fed jiwoo, when you changed her, the whole thing. logged it all.” he pulls out his phone and shows you the app. “see? i even added a note that you did the 2 a.m. burping.”
you smile despite the tiredness. “thanks. teamwork, i guess.”
he nods, but his expression turns more serious. “i’m trying not to let this mess with training. coach already warned us about distractions before nationals.”
throughout the rest of the morning, your phone buzzes every so often with texts from jay.
jay: she’s being good in history. just made a small fuss during the quiz but i rocked her under the desk.
you: lucky. she’s sleeping now but i keep checking the health score every five minutes.
jay: same. we’re at 92%. not bad for day two.
jay: by the way, are you free after lunch? i have optional practice at 1 but i can skip if we need to handle something.
the messages feel easy, almost natural now. you catch yourself smiling at your screen more than once.
right before lunch ends, disaster strikes. you check the app while walking to your next class and freeze. jiwoo’s health score has dropped sharply to 76%. a red warning flashes: “baby showing signs of illness — needs immediate care and rest.”
your stomach sinks. you text jay quickly.
you: jiwoo’s sick. health at 76%. what do we do?
jay: meet me at the lockers after the bell. we’ll figure it out.
when you reach the spot, he is already there, carrier in hand even though it is your turn. his face is focused, brows drawn together.
“the app says she needs quiet time and extra feedings today,” he explains, voice low. “if we ignore it, the score keeps dropping. i already told coach i’m skipping the 1 p.m. optional session. i’ll make it up at the 6 p.m. full practice — extra sprints or whatever he wants.”
you bite your lip. “i was supposed to go to foreign language club. but i can skip too. we can take her somewhere quiet.”
he nods, relieved. “music room is usually empty after lunch. let’s go there.”
the two of you spend the next hour tucked away in the small practice room at the end of the arts hallway. jiwoo fusses on and off, but you take turns holding her, feeding her the special “medicine” drops from the kit, and logging every action. jay sits cross-legged on the floor beside you, back against the wall, gently rocking the carrier with one foot while you update the logbook.
“this feels weirdly real,” you murmur after a while, watching jiwoo’s lights finally shift back toward green. “like we’re actually worried about her getting better.”
jay chuckles softly, running a hand through his hair. “tell me about it. i keep thinking if her score drops too low it’s going to look bad on my record. but also… i don’t want to let you down either.”
you glance at him, surprised by how honest he sounds. “you’re not. we’re both trying.”
he offers a small smile. “yeah. we are.”
by the time the health score climbs back to 89%, the afternoon is half gone. you both head to your separate classes, but the shared worry lingers like a quiet thread between you.
after school, jay finds you near the exit.
“practice is at 6,” he says, shifting the carrier to you. “but come watch if you can? the field’s open. you can bring jiwoo and hand her off to me after. that way i get some time with her before the real session starts, and you don’t have to wait around alone.”
you hesitate only a second. “okay. i’ll be there.”
the bleachers are mostly empty when you arrive, just a few other students scattered around. you sit a few rows up, carrier beside you, watching the team warm up. jay spots you almost immediately and jogs over during a water break, sweaty and breathing hard but grinning.
“you came,” he says, wiping his face with the bottom of his jersey. up close you notice the way his shoulders look broader in the practice gear, the small scar on his nose you had never noticed before.
“figured it was only fair after you skipped optional practice for her,” you reply, carefully handing over the carrier. jiwoo is quiet for now, lulled by the fresh air.
he takes her gently, adjusting the straps like he has done it a hundred times already. “thanks. i’ll bring her back after this set. coach is letting me sit out the last drills if i do extra conditioning later.”
you watch as he jogs back to the field, carrier carefully set down near the bench where the manager can keep an eye on it. the boys notice immediately. jake yells something teasing across the grass, sunghoon shakes his head with a smirk, but jay just flips them off without missing a beat. seeing him balance football and the doll makes something warm settle in your chest.
practice runs long, but right at 7:30 jay waves you down. he is breathing heavily, hair sticking to his forehead, but he looks energized rather than exhausted.
“we’re done for now,” he says, slinging his duffel over one shoulder and taking the carrier with the other. “my house is closer than yours. do you wanna come over? my mom’s home and she’s been dying to see the baby everyone’s talking about. plus we can eat something real before i drive you back.”
you agree before the nerves can talk you out of it. the walk to his car is short, and soon you are pulling up to a neat two-story house on a quiet street. jay parks in the driveway and kills the engine.
“warning — my mom is going to be excited,” he says with a sheepish smile. “my dad is traveling again, so it’s just us.”
the second you step inside, the smell of something warm and savory greets you. mrs. park appears from the kitchen, wiping her hands on a towel, eyes lighting up the moment she sees the carrier.
“oh my goodness, you must be her!” she exclaims, voice bright and welcoming. “jay told me all about the project. come in, come in. and this must be little jiwoo!”
she coos over the doll immediately, asking to hold the carrier while you both take off your shoes. jay watches with an embarrassed but fond expression, rubbing the back of his neck.
“mom, please stop acting like that's a real baby. and please, don’t scare her away on day two.”
“nonsense. this is my grandaughter now. and that poor girl is already surviving parenting with you — i'm sure she’s tough.” mrs. park winks at you. “you two look exhausted. sit down. i’ll heat up some ramen. real food, not that cafeteria stuff.”
jay leads you to the living room, where you both collapse onto the couch. he takes jiwoo for a bit, rocking her absently while you text your friends quick updates. the house feels lived-in and comfortable — football trophies on a shelf, family photos on the wall, a stack of textbooks on the coffee table.
“this is nice,” you say quietly, watching him with the baby. “different from school.”
he glances up, a softer look in his eyes. “yeah. at school everyone sees the football guy. here it’s just… me trying to cook the best ramen ever.”
true to his word, he heads to the kitchen a few minutes later and returns with two steaming bowls of instant ramen, perfectly prepared with an egg and green onions on top. he sets one in front of you, then sits close enough that your knees almost touch, still holding jiwoo in one arm.
“here. eat before she decides it’s crying time again.”
you take the bowl gratefully, the warmth spreading through your tired body. “thank you. seriously. i didn’t expect any of this today.”
he shrugs, but his smile is genuine. “neither did i. but it’s not so bad having someone to do this with. makes the scholarship stress feel a little less heavy.”
you talk while you eat — about his upcoming match, your favorite subjects, the way yunjin is plotting revenge on sunghoon, how taehyun apparently sang lullabies badly over voice note last night. jay laughs more freely here, in his own space, the reserved jock facade melting away into someone thoughtful and a little shy when he catches you watching him.
after dinner, mrs. park insists on taking a photo of the three of you — you, jay, and jiwoo — for her own memories. jay protests half-heartedly but ends up smiling anyway.
when it is finally time to leave, he drives you home through the quiet streets, windows down just enough to let in the cool evening air. jiwoo sleeps in the back the whole way.
“thanks for today,” he says as he pulls up to your house. “skipping practice, coming over… all of it. i know it’s extra for you.”
you unbuckle, turning to face him. “i wanted to. you're… pretty nice, actually.”
he meets your eyes, something soft and new flickering there. “you’re pretty nice, too.”
the moment stretches for a second longer than it should. then jiwoo makes a small sound in her sleep and the spell breaks.
“text me when you get her settled tonight,” you say quietly.
“i will. goodnight, sleep well.”
“night. try to sleep.” you laugh softly.
you step out and walk toward your house, watching his taillights disappear down the street. your heart feels fuller than it did this morning, the exhaustion mixed with a quiet, growing warmth. day two is over, but something between you and jay has quietly begun to shift — slow, steady, and surprisingly real.
-------
WEDNESDAY. DAY 3:
the morning light filters through your curtains as you get ready for school, jiwoo’s carrier already waiting by the door from last night’s hand-off. jay had taken her after he dropped you home yesterday, and you had fallen asleep surprisingly fast, knowing she was with him. your phone buzzes with a single text from him at 7:12 a.m.
jay: on my way to school. jiwoo survived the night. barely. see you in class.
you smile at the message, a tiny flutter in your chest that you quickly brush off as leftover tiredness. you grab your bag and head out, the carrier feeling lighter today for some reason.
when you walk into ms. choi’s classroom for first period, jay is already there, slumped a little in his seat at your assigned double desk. his eyes have dark circles underneath, his hair is messier than usual, and he is rubbing his face with both hands like he can wipe the exhaustion away. the carrier sits between your spots, jiwoo quiet inside for now.
you slide into the chair next to him, setting your bag down gently.
“morning,” you say softly, studying his face. “you look… really tired.”
he lets out a low chuckle, voice rough and sleepy. “yeah. i didn’t sleep much. jiwoo decided 1:30 a.m., 3:45 a.m., and 5:20 a.m. were all perfect times to scream. i fed her, changed her, burped her — the whole routine. at one point i had to knock on my mom’s door and ask for backup because she wouldn’t settle. mom rocked her for like twenty minutes while i logged everything.”
your eyebrows shoot up. “why didn’t you text me? i could’ve talked you through it or at least stayed up with you over messages.”
jay shakes his head, offering a small, genuine smile that makes the tiredness in his eyes soften. “i thought about it. but you handled the 2 a.m. shift on monday night, and you have her all day today. i wanted you to actually sleep. you’ve been good about this whole thing — didn’t seem fair to drag you into another rough night when i could handle it.”
you feel a warm pull in your chest at his words, something gentle and considerate that you hadn’t expected from the quiet football senior. “that’s… really sweet of you. but next time, text me anyway. we’re supposed to be a team, right?”
he nods, leaning back in his chair. “yeah. a team. i’ll remember that.”
before you can say more, ms. choi claps her hands at the front of the room, her usual bright energy filling the space. the desks are arranged in a loose circle today, pairs sitting side by side.
“good morning, everyone! welcome to our first parent support group session. today we’re going to share — honestly — one challenge and one win from the first two days of the project. no sugarcoating. this is about learning how to communicate and support each other through real-life messiness. we’ll go around the circle. volunteers first, or i’ll pick.”
the room fills with a mix of groans and nervous laughs. sunoo raises his hand immediately, looking like he has been waiting to vent.
ms. choi nods at him. “kim sunoo and kang taehyun — go ahead.”
sunoo sighs dramatically, gesturing to taehyun who sits beside him with equally tired eyes. “our challenge is that we’re both terrible at this and might actually fail. taehyun had her monday night and texted me panicked voice notes because he couldn’t figure out why she wouldn’t stop crying. i had to guide him like a customer service rep at 1 a.m. last night she woke up three times and we both barely slept. we’re worried we won’t make it to the end of the week without the health score tanking.”
taehyun rubs the back of his neck, adding in his calm but deadpan voice, “yeah. the challenge is sleep deprivation and my complete lack of baby instincts. the win is… we’re still at 84% health and we haven’t thrown the doll out the window yet. small victories.”
the class laughs lightly. ms. choi smiles encouragingly. “honest. good. next?”
yunjin jumps in without waiting, her voice sharp but tired. baby sunghoon jr. rests in the carrier between her and sunghoon, who looks mildly guilty.
“challenge: my partner thinks the baby is an optional accessory he can pick up when it fits his football schedule,” yunjin says, shooting sunghoon a pointed look. “he promised to meet me at the door yesterday morning and didn’t show. i waited, the baby fussed, and i had to handle it alone before rehearsal. he’s great on the field but apparently coordination off it is a struggle.”
sunghoon clears his throat, voice low. “challenge accepted. i messed up the hand-off. win is that last night i took a night shift so she could sleep, and the health score actually went up. we’re learning… slowly.”
yunjin huffs but there’s a tiny reluctant smile tugging at her lips. “fine. that part was decent.”
next come kazuha and gaeul. kazuha speaks first, her voice calm and measured as always.
“our challenge was the random crying during my dance practice yesterday, but we worked around it. win is that we actually enjoy teaming up. gaeul is super organized — we made a shared calendar and even a playlist of soft songs for when the baby gets fussy. health score is at 95%. it feels nice working together.”
gaeul nods, smiling warmly at kazuha. “exactly. no big drama, just steady progress. we’re both getting better at reading the cues.”
more pairs share — some funny stories about dolls crying in the middle of tests, others about late-night arguments over whose turn it was. then ms. choi’s eyes land on you and jay.
“go ahead — your turn.”
you glance at jay. he gives you a small nod, like it’s okay if you start. you take a breath.
“challenge… the nights are harder than i thought. jiwoo woke me at 2 a.m. monday, and jay had a rough one last night too. we’re both tired, and balancing it with classes and his football schedule is tricky. but the win is that we’re actually communicating. he skipped optional practice yesterday to help when she got ‘sick,’ and we got the health score back up together. we’re… managing. better than i expected.”
jay leans forward slightly, voice steady but quieter than usual because of how worn out he is.
“yeah. challenge is the sleep and making sure this doesn’t mess with nationals prep — scouts are watching. win is she’s really good at calming jiwoo down fast, and she’s been flexible with the schedule even when i have practice. we’re figuring it out as a team. health at 89% this morning. not perfect, but we’re not failing.”
ms. choi nods approvingly. “honest and balanced. that’s what this is about — supporting each other when life gets busy. good work, you two.”
the support group wraps up with a few more pairs, and then ms. choi reviews some tips for the rest of the week. the rest of the morning feels lighter after the sharing session. you and jay sit together in the next class, trading quiet comments about the other pairs’ stories. he looks less weighed down now that he has talked about the rough night.
lunch arrives, and instead of sitting with your separate friends, you both naturally head to the same table near the windows again. jay carries the carrier this time, setting it carefully between you. jiwoo stays mostly quiet, and he handles a small fuss with surprising ease — rocking her gently while you unpack your food.
“you’re getting really good at that,” you say, watching him pat her back with the right rhythm.
he shrugs, but there is a small proud smile on his lips. “practice makes perfect, i guess. last night was rough, but this morning she only cried once and settled fast when i fed her. mom helped with tips too — she said i was holding her too tense at first.”
you laugh softly. “your mom seemed really excited about the project yesterday.”
“she is. keeps asking for updates like it’s a real grandkid.” he pauses, glancing at you. “she liked you, by the way. said you seem kind and level-headed. high praise from her.”
your cheeks warm a little at that. “tell her thanks. the ramen was good too.”
the conversation flows easily over lunch — about how sunoo and taehyun are dramatically bonding over their shared exhaustion, how yunjin is slowly warming up to sunghoon despite her complaints, and how kazuha and gaeul make the whole thing look effortless. jay talks a bit more about football, the pressure of the upcoming match, and how skipping optional practice yesterday actually made him focus better in the evening session because he wasn’t resenting the project.
“it’s weird,” he admits, taking a bite of his food. “i thought this would be a total distraction, but having someone to share the load with makes it feel less like a chore.”
you nod, feeling those small butterflies again as you watch him interact with jiwoo. “same. i was nervous about being paired with a senior i didn’t know, but you’re… easy to talk to.”
he meets your eyes for a moment, something soft flickering there before he looks back at the carrier. “you too.”
the afternoon classes pass without any major jiwoo meltdowns. you take her for most of them while jay attends his, but he texts you updates and silly memes about tired parents whenever he can. by the final bell, the day feels surprisingly nice — productive, calm, and warmer than the chaotic start of the week.
as you pack up for the last class of the day, jay appears beside your locker.
“i’ll walk you,” he says simply, taking the carrier from you even though it is your turn.
you blink. “it’s out of your way though. your class is on the other side of the building.”
he shrugs, adjusting the straps on his shoulder. “doesn’t matter. we can talk a bit more. plus, jiwoo’s been good all afternoon — i want to make sure she stays that way until the hand-off.”
you fall into step beside him, the hallway buzzing around you but feeling distant. the conversation stays light — favorite snacks for late-night study sessions, funny stories from his team practices, how you and your friends sometimes do convenience store runs at midnight. every so often his arm brushes yours when he shifts the carrier, and each time a small spark of butterflies flutters in your stomach.
when you reach the door of your classroom, he stops and hands the carrier back carefully.
“here. she’s all yours for the rest of the day. text me if she gives you trouble.”
you take it, fingers brushing his for a brief second. “thanks for walking me. and for last night… even if you didn’t text.”
he smiles, that half-smile that is becoming familiar. “anytime. see you tomorrow.”
“see you tomorrow, jay.”
you watch him walk away down the hallway, shoulders a little straighter despite the tiredness. as you step into class and sit down, the butterflies linger — quiet, unexpected, but definitely there. the project is forcing you two to spend time together, but the way he chose to let you sleep, the way he walks you even when it is inconvenient, the easy conversations… it is starting to feel like more than just a shared grade.
wednesday ends on a gentle note, the kind that leaves you replaying small moments in your head long after the final bell.
-------
THURSDAY. DAY 4:
the night passes smoother than the previous ones. jiwoo only wakes you once, around 1:40 a.m., with a short, fussy cry that you handle quickly. you feed her, burp her, and rock her back to sleep in under ten minutes, logging everything neatly in the app before crawling back under the covers. when your alarm goes off in the morning you actually feel somewhat rested — a small win that makes the walk to school feel lighter.
you meet jay at the usual spot outside ms. choi’s classroom. he looks better today, the dark circles under his eyes faded a bit, and he gives you a genuine smile when he sees you approaching with the carrier.
“morning,” he says, voice still a little husky from sleep. “how was she last night?”
“surprisingly good,” you reply, handing the carrier over for his morning classes. “only one wake-up and she settled fast. i think we’re getting the hang of her patterns.”
he nods, adjusting the straps carefully. “that’s a relief. i had a decent night too after the rough one yesterday. thanks for taking the full shift today — practice is going to be brutal later.”
the morning classes go by without any major incidents. jiwoo stays mostly calm in your care, and jay texts you occasional updates from his side, including a funny photo of her “sleeping” on his desk during a break. the shared logbook fills with small notes back and forth, and the health score hovers steadily in the high 80s.
by the time lunch ends and afternoon classes begin, the schedule clash becomes obvious. jay has mandatory football practice starting at 6 p.m. — right when jiwoo’s app starts giving warning beeps about needing attention. you check your phone during the last period and see the health score dipping slightly. you make a quick decision.
after the final bell, you grab the carrier and head straight to the football field instead of going home. the late afternoon sun is warm on your back as you walk across the grass, the distant sound of whistles and shouts growing louder. a few players are already warming up, stretching and jogging drills.
you spot jay near the bench, helmet off, talking to coach. he turns when he hears footsteps and his face lights up the moment he sees you — eyes widening slightly, shoulders relaxing, a bright, surprised smile breaking across his face.
“hey,” he calls, jogging over immediately. sweat already dots his forehead, and his practice jersey clings a little to his chest. “you came all the way here?”
you shrug, trying to play it casual even as your heart does a small flip at how happy he looks. “the app said she needs care soon, and your practice clashes. figured i’d bring her so you can take a turn during water break. didn’t want the score to drop because of timing.”
he takes the carrier gently from you, his fingers brushing yours for a second longer than necessary. “you’re a lifesaver. seriously. coach is strict about focus today, but water breaks are every twenty minutes. i can handle her then.”
before you can respond, sunghoon and jake wander over, helmets tucked under their arms, matching grins already forming.
“well, well,” jake says, voice loud and teasing. “look who decided to bring the baby to practice. jay, you lighting up like that when she shows up? that’s new.”
sunghoon crosses his arms, smirking as he eyes the way jay is carefully adjusting the carrier on his own shoulder. “yeah. i’ve never seen you smile that big during warm-ups. usually you’re all focused and grumpy. now one junior with a doll shows up and suddenly you’re glowing.”
jay rolls his eyes, but the tips of his ears turn pink. “shut up. we actually care about this project. unlike some captains who can’t even meet their partner at the door on time.”
sunghoon laughs, not bothered. “touché. but seriously, man — you two are starting to look like actual parents showing up to support each other. it’s cute.”
jake wiggles his eyebrows. “cute and dangerous for your focus. coach is gonna notice if you keep glancing at the bleachers every five seconds.”
jay shoves jake’s shoulder lightly, but he is smiling despite himself. “you two are the worst. go run laps or something.”
the teasing intensifies for a few more seconds until coach blows the whistle, calling everyone back to drills. jay hands the carrier back to you for now, giving you a quick, grateful nod.
“i’ll come find you at the next water break. thanks again for coming.”
you find a spot on the lower bleachers, close enough to watch but not in the way. practice is intense — sprints, tackling dummies, passing routes. you keep an eye on jiwoo, feeding her when she starts to fuss and logging it right away. the health score climbs back up steadily.
during the first water break, jay jogs straight over, breathing hard, grabbing his bottle with one hand while reaching for the carrier with the other. he handles jiwoo with surprising gentleness for someone who just finished running drills, rocking her lightly while taking quick sips of water.
“is she good?” he asks between breaths, sweat dripping down his temple.
“yeah. she calmed down fast when i fed her. you’re getting really natural with her now.”
he grins, tired but proud. “thanks to you. team effort, remember?”
the break ends too soon, and he hands her back before jogging off again. you watch him rejoin the team, noticing how sunghoon claps him on the back and says something that makes jay shake his head with a laugh.
the second water break comes, and this time ningning — one of the head cheerleaders — walks over just as jay approaches you. she is in her practice uniform, ponytail swinging, bright smile on her face. she stops right beside jay, barely glancing at you or the baby.
“hey jay,” ningning says, voice sweet and flirty, tilting her head. “you looked really good out there today. that last route you ran? impressive. maybe after practice you can show me some tips? i’ve been wanting to get better at… coordination.”
she steps a little closer, ignoring the carrier in your hands and the way jay is clearly focused on you. a tiny, unexpected spark of jealousy flares in your chest — sharp and warm at the same time. you hate how it feels, but you can’t stop it. ningning is confident, popular, the type who fits perfectly with the football crowd. you are just… you, standing here with a fake baby like an awkward parent.
jay barely hesitates. he shifts closer to you, one hand lightly touching the edge of the carrier as if to anchor himself.
“thanks, ningning, but i’m good,” he says politely but firmly, voice steady. “i've got practice, then i have to handle this project with her. we’re kind of busy with the baby schedule.”
ningning’s smile falters for a second, her eyes flicking to you and then to jiwoo. “oh… right. the doll thing. well, if you change your mind later—”
“i won’t,” jay cuts in gently but clearly, offering her a small nod. “but good luck with your cheer stuff.”
she walks away with a little wave, but the flirtation is obviously shut down. jay turns back to you immediately, expression softening.
“sorry about that,” he says quietly, taking the carrier again for the last few minutes of his break. “she’s always like that. doesn’t mean anything.”
you swallow, the jealousy fading as quickly as it came, replaced by a warmer flutter. “it’s fine. you didn’t have to… i mean, you could’ve talked to her.”
he shakes his head, looking at you directly. “nah. we’re doing this together. plus, i’d rather figure out how to keep jiwoo’s score up than worry about cheer tips right now.”
coach’s whistle blows again. jay hands the carrier back, his fingers brushing yours once more.
“stay if you can? after practice i’ll drive you home again — unless you have plans.”
you nod, heart beating a little faster. “i’ll stay.”
the rest of practice drags on, but you find yourself watching jay more than the drills — the way he moves with focus and energy, the quick smiles he shoots toward the bleachers when he thinks you are looking. when practice finally ends, he jogs over, hair damp with sweat, grabbing his bag and the carrier in one smooth motion.
“ready?” he asks, voice tired but content.
“yeah.”
as you walk toward the parking lot together, the teasing from sunghoon and jake echoes faintly behind you — “look at the happy family leaving together!” — but jay just laughs it off, shoulder bumping yours lightly.
thursday leaves you with a quiet realization: the jealousy you felt was small, but real. and the way jay shut it down without hesitation makes those butterflies feel a little stronger, a little harder to ignore.
-------
FRIDAY. DAY 5:
the night slips by in a haze of quiet routine. jiwoo wakes only once, around midnight, with a soft whimper that you soothe almost instantly. you rock her against your shoulder in the dark, whispering nonsense words until she settles, the carrier lights blinking green again. the logbook entry feels routine now — “12:07 a.m. quick rock and burp, settled in 4 minutes.” you fall back asleep faster than you have all week, the exhaustion from earlier days softening into something almost manageable. when morning comes, the house is quiet, your parents already gone for their shifts, and you feel a strange sense of calm as you prepare for school.
friday had left a lingering warmth in your chest — the way jay had shut down ningning so quickly at the field, the easy way he had handed jiwoo back with that soft half-smile, the texts that kept coming even after practice. you catch yourself replaying those moments while you walk to school, the carrier light on your chest. your friends are waiting at the gate again, their faces a mix of tired smiles and dramatic sighs.
“jiwoo was an angel last night,” you tell them, adjusting the blanket. “only one wake-up and it was over fast. i actually got decent sleep.”
kazuha nods, her own carrier steady. “same with eunchae. gaeul and i are in a good rhythm now. she even sent me a good-morning text with a lullaby suggestion.”
sunoo groans theatrically but grins. “taehyun took her again and only panicked once. he’s starting to brag about his burping technique. it’s cute in a chaotic way.”
yunjin crosses her arms, though her eyes sparkle with reluctant amusement. “sunghoon actually texted me at 11 p.m. asking if the baby needed anything before he crashed. progress? maybe. but he still calls her ‘the tiny distraction’ when he thinks i’m not listening.”
the conversation flows easily as you all head inside, trading more stories about night shifts and health scores. the shared exhaustion has bonded the group in a way that feels almost familial now, and you laugh more than you complain. the morning classes pass in a blur of notes and occasional glances at your phone. jay texts you a couple of times from his own classes — short updates on jiwoo’s schedule and a silly meme about sleep-deprived parents that makes you smile in the middle of english.
by the time lunch arrives, you meet him at the usual table near the windows. he looks focused but relaxed, the carrier already between you as he rocks it gently with one foot while eating.
“was she good for you last night?” he asks, voice low so the nearby tables don’t overhear.
you nod, taking a bite of your food. “yeah, really calm. only one quick fuss. you?”
“perfect. slept straight through after practice. thanks for handling the full day yesterday — it helped a lot with an essay i had to hand today.” he leans in a little closer, eyes meeting yours. “we’re actually doing okay with this, aren’t we?”
the question feels heavier than it should, laced with something unspoken. you feel the tension from yesterday’s field visit linger in the air between you — the teasing from his friends, the way he had chosen to stay focused on the project, on you. “yeah,” you reply softly. “better than i expected. you’re not as bad at the dad thing as you thought.”
he chuckles, the sound warm and low. “don’t give me too much credit yet. tonight’s my full night with her, right? after practice.”
you confirm the schedule you had texted earlier. practice is running late again — coach pushing hard for nationals — so it will end around 8 p.m. jay offers to pick you up from your house once he’s done, since he will be taking jiwoo for the night anyway. the idea of seeing him after dark, outside of school, sends a quiet thrill through you that you try to ignore.
the afternoon drags a little, jiwoo staying mostly cooperative in your classes. you update the logbook diligently, and jay keeps the texts coming — casual questions about your day, a photo of his lunch tray with a caption about missing “family lunch,” and a reminder about the pickup. each message builds the tension a little more, the easy rhythm between you feeling less like a forced project and more like something you both look forward to.
when the final bell rings, you head home, jiwoo in the carrier. you do homework, help with a few chores, and wait for the evening to unfold. around 8:15 your phone buzzes.
jay: just finished. showered quick. heading your way now. still okay if i pick you up?
you reply instantly. the wait feels longer than it is, your heart picking up pace when headlights finally sweep across your driveway. you grab the carrier — jiwoo quiet and ready for the hand-off — and step outside. jay’s car idles at the curb, him leaning over to open the passenger door from inside.
“hey,” he says as you slide in, the familiar scent of his mint gum and fresh laundry filling the small space. he looks tired from practice but his eyes brighten when they land on you and the carrier. “she been good?”
“perfect,” you answer, buckling in while he carefully takes the carrier and secures it in the back. “how was practice?”
“brutal but good. coach had us running extra for conditioning. nationals nerves are real.” he pulls away from the curb, the streetlights casting soft shadows across his face. “i was thinking… instead of just dropping you off right away, do you want to grab dinner somewhere? nothing fancy — there’s that 24-hour diner a few blocks from here. we can eat quick, update the log together, and then i’ll take her for the night.”
the invitation catches you off guard in the best way. the tension that has been building all week — the shared glances, the protective way he handled ningning, the easy conversations — tightens in your chest. “yeah,” you say, trying to keep your voice casual. “that sounds good. i’m actually hungry.”
he smiles, that small half-smile that makes the butterflies stir stronger. “cool. my treat. you’ve been carrying a lot of the load this week.”
the drive is short, filled with light talk about practice drills and your last class quiz. jay parks near the diner, a cozy spot with neon signs and the smell of burgers and coffee drifting out. he insists on carrying the carrier inside, his free hand brushing yours accidentally as you walk through the door. the place is half-empty at this hour, soft music playing in the background.
you slide into a booth across from each other, the carrier placed carefully on the seat beside you. a waitress drops off menus and water, cooing briefly at jiwoo before taking your orders — simple burgers, fries, and shakes for both of you.
conversation flows naturally at first. jay talks more about the scholarship pressure, how scouts will be at the sunday match, and how the project has surprisingly helped him manage stress by forcing him to schedule everything better. you share stories about your friends’ drama — yunjin slowly softening with sunghoon, sunoo and taehyun turning their panic into a running joke. the food arrives warm and comforting, and you both eat while taking turns glancing at jiwoo, who stays peacefully asleep.
halfway through the meal, an older woman at the next table leans over, her eyes lighting up at the sight of the carrier. she has kind wrinkles around her eyes and a gentle smile.
“oh, what a beautiful little family,” she says warmly, clasping her hands. “you two look so young to have such a precious baby. how old is she?”
the question hangs in the air. you open your mouth to correct her — “oh, no, she’s not real, it’s a school project” — but jay speaks first, his voice smooth and playful, leaning into the moment with surprising ease.
“she’s almost a month old now,” he says, reaching over to gently adjust jiwoo’s blanket with careful fingers. his tone is soft, almost proud. “our little jiwoo. she’s the most precious thing ever — keeps us up at night but we wouldn’t trade it for anything.” you can't help but laugh quielty.
the old lady beams, eyes crinkling. “she has your eyes, young man. and you, dear, have such a gentle way with her. new parents are always so sweet together. cherish these moments — they go by so fast.”
you feel heat rush to your face, the tension spiking sharply. your heart pounds as you glance at jay, expecting him to laugh it off or explain. instead, he just nods along, that soft smile still in place.
“we will,” he says sincerely. “thank you. she really is everything to us.”
the woman wishes you well and turns back to her own table, leaving a charged silence between you and jay. you stare at him, eyebrows raised, the butterflies turning into something heavier, warmer, more insistent.
“what was that?” you whisper once she is out of earshot, half-laughing, half-flustered. “i was about to tell her it’s a doll for school.”
jay rubs the back of his neck, but his eyes meet yours without embarrassment. “i know. sorry— it just… felt harmless. she looked so happy thinking we were this cute young couple with a real baby. i didn’t want to disappoint her. plus…” he pauses, voice dropping lower, the tension thickening the air around the booth. “it wasn’t entirely weird to play along. we’ve been doing this all week — the hand-offs, the late texts, the worrying together. it kind of feels like we are figuring out the parent thing. even if it’s fake.”
his words settle over you like a blanket, heavy with implication. the project has forced proximity, but moments like this — the field visit, the car rides, now dinner — are turning it into something more. you feel the pull stronger than before, the way his gaze lingers on you a second longer than necessary, the way your skin tingles when his knee brushes yours under the table.
“you’re quite dangerous when you decide to be charming, aren't you?” you murmur, trying to keep it light even as your pulse races.
he laughs softly, but there is a new intensity in his eyes. “only with you, apparently. the project’s messing with my head a little. or maybe it’s just making me notice things i didn’t before.”
the rest of the meal passes in a haze of charged conversation — lighter topics mixed with quieter admissions. he asks about your plans after high school, you ask about his football dreams beyond the scholarship. every shared laugh, every accidental touch while reaching for fries, builds the tension higher. jiwoo stays quiet, almost like she is in on the moment, her presence a constant reminder of the fake life you are building together.
when the check comes, jay pays despite your protest, waving it off with “you’ve earned it after all the night shifts.” outside the diner the air is cooler, the streetlights casting a soft glow. he drives you the short distance home, the car filled with comfortable but electric silence. jiwoo is secured in the back, ready for her night with him.
he parks in front of your house but does not unlock the doors right away. the engine hums low, and he turns slightly in his seat to face you.
“thanks for tonight,” he says quietly. “dinner, the company… all of it. i know it’s late and you could’ve just handed her off at the door.”
you unbuckle slowly, heart still racing from the old lady moment and everything unsaid. “i had fun. even when you decided to play happy family with a stranger.”
he chuckles, but his expression turns more serious, eyes searching yours in the dim light. “about that… i wasn’t completely joking. this week has been weird, but in a good way. being paired with you — it’s made me realize i like spending time with you. not just for the grade or the schedule. more than that.”
the confession hangs there, raw and tentative, increasing the tension until it feels almost tangible. you swallow, the butterflies now a full storm in your stomach. “i… feel the same. it started as awkward, but now it feels like we’re actually connecting. the project’s forcing us to be honest in ways we probably wouldn’t otherwise.”
jay nods, his hand resting on the gear shift close to where yours lingers on the console. for a moment it seems like he might reach over, close the small distance, but he holds back, respecting the slow pace you both seem to need.
“get some rest,” he says finally, voice gentle. “i’ll handle jiwoo tonight and text updates.”
you step out, the cool air hitting your flushed cheeks. “night, jay. drive safe with her.”
“night.”
he waits until you are inside before pulling away, taillights fading down the street. inside your room you collapse onto the bed, replaying every second of the evening — the old lady’s assumption, jay’s easy play-along, the quiet admissions in the car. the tension has shifted tonight, no longer just friendly cooperation but something deeper, sweeter, full of possibility. the fake baby has cracked open real feelings, and as you drift off, you wonder how much longer you can both pretend it is only about the project.
the week is winding down, but whatever is growing between you and jay feels like it is just beginning — slow, tentative, and impossible to ignore.
-------
SATURDAY. DAY 6:
saturday morning arrives with a silence that feels almost foreign after a week of being woken by high-pitched digital wailing. when you finally blink your eyes open, the sun is streaming through the curtains in long, dusty bars of gold. you reach for your phone instinctively, your thumb hovering over the baby app before you remember: jay has her.
you scroll through your notifications and find a string of texts from him, sent in the quiet hours of the early morning.
at 3:14 a.m.:
jay: she’s finally out. took her twenty minutes to settle after a diaper change. why does she look so peaceful when she’s been a menace for two hours?
jay: also, i think i’m hallucinating from sleep deprivation, but i’m pretty sure she just made a sound that sounded like 'ball.' she’s going to be a star athlete.
then, the last one, sent at 8:30 a.m.:
jay: morning. we’re alive. barely. i’m caffeinated and jiwoo is currently staring at a wall. park at 11 still on?
you smile into your pillow, typing back a quick confirmation. the butterflies that settled in your stomach at the diner last night are still there, humming a low, steady tune.
the park is halfway between your houses, a sprawling green space filled with families and dogs catching frisbees. you spot jay almost immediately, leaning against a large oak tree near the pond. he’s wearing a simple black hoodie and joggers, the baby carrier strapped to his chest. he looks like he belongs in a catalog for 'world's most attractive tired dad.'
when he sees you, his face breaks into that wide, genuine grin that always makes your pulse skip a beat.
“look who it is,” he calls out as you get closer. “jiwoo, look, your mom is here to save us from this boring tree.”
you laugh, stepping into his space. the scent of his laundry detergent and a hint of coffee hits you. “morning. how are the 'star athlete' and her exhausted father doing?”
“she's being suspiciously quiet today,” jay says, looking down at the doll. “it’s like she knows it’s the weekend. she’s been in 'easy mode' since 9:00 a.m. i’m actually a little scared she’s plotting something big for later.”
“maybe she just wants us to have a nice day,” you suggest, reaching out to adjust the tiny hat on jiwoo’s head. your fingers graze the fabric of jay’s hoodie, and for a second, your gaze catches his. the air between you feels thick and sweet.
“i’d like that,” jay says softly.
you spend the next two hours wandering the paved paths of the park. without the pressure of school hallways or the rush of practice, the conversation feels effortless. you talk about everything and nothing. he tells you about his favorite childhood dog — a golden retriever who was terrible at fetching — and you tell him about the time you tried to dye your own hair in middle school and ended up with a patch of neon orange that took months to fade.
“no way,” he laughs, his shoulder bumping yours as you walk. “i need to see pictures of that. please tell me your parents have evidence.”
“buried deep in the family archives,” you say, shaking your head. “you have to earn the right to see the orange hair phase, park jongseong.”
“oh, so we're on a points system now?” he teases, his eyes sparkling. “how do i earn points? do i get some for being a solo parent last night?”
“maybe a few,” you admit.
eventually, you find a wide, flat stretch of grass away from the main crowd. jay drops his duffel bag — which you realize is filled with both baby supplies and football gear.
“alright,” he says, pulling out a well-worn football. “since we have some peace and quiet, and since you've spent all week watching me run around a field, it's your turn. i’m going to teach you how to throw a proper spiral.”
you eye the ball skeptically. “jay, the last time i threw something, it was a crumpled piece of paper at a trash can and i missed by three feet. i don't think this is a good idea.”
“trust me,” he says, stepping closer. he stands behind you, his presence warm and grounding. “it's all about the grip. here.”
he reaches around, his hands covering yours as he guides your fingers onto the laces of the ball. his chest is inches from your back, and you can hear the steady rhythm of his breathing. your heart is doing triple-time against your ribs.
“fingers on the laces,” he murmurs, his voice right next to your ear. “don't grip it too tight. you want a little space between your palm and the ball. see?”
you nod, your voice feeling trapped in your throat. his hands are large and calloused, a contrast to the gentleness of his touch.
“now, bring it back by your ear,” he instructs, moving your arm with his. “step forward with your opposite foot, and when you release, flick your wrist. like you're pointing at the target.”
he steps back, giving you space to try. you take a breath, step, and throw. the ball wobbles through the air, traveling about ten feet before thudding unceremoniously into the grass.
jay lets out a snort of laughter.
“don't say it,” you warn, pointing a finger at him.
“i wasn't going to say anything!” he says, holding his hands up in defense. “it was... a very brave first attempt. the target was the ground, right? because you hit it perfectly.”
“you're the worst,” you laugh, picking up a handful of grass and tossing it at him.
“hey! i'm the coach!” he jogs over to retrieve the ball. “again. focus. imagine ningning is standing right where the ball lands and you're trying to— no, wait, that's mean. imagine there’s a scout there. or just imagine i'm there waiting to catch it.”
the next twenty minutes are a blur of laughter and terrible throws. jay is patient, constantly encouraging you, and eventually, you manage a throw that actually spirals, landing right in his outstretched hands.
he let out a loud “yes!” and jogs back to you, lifting a hand for a high-five. “see? natural talent. scholarship is basically in the bag.”
“i think i'll stick to my day job,” you pant, your face flushed from the exertion and the fun.
“which is?”
“come on. i'll show you.”
you lead him to the far edge of the park, where a small, hidden trail winds through a patch of dense trees. it opens up into a tiny clearing overlooking a quiet creek. there’s an old, sun-bleached wooden bench tucked under a willow tree.
“this is it,” you say, sitting down and patting the spot next to you. “my quiet spot. i come here to read when everything feels a bit too loud.”
jay sits, careful of jiwoo in the carrier. he looks around at the dappled sunlight on the water and the way the willow leaves sway in the breeze. “it's nice,” he says, his voice dropping to a softer register. “it's really peaceful. i get why you like it.”
“it’s the only place i can actually hear my own thoughts,” you admit.
“what are your thoughts saying today?” he asks, turning his head to look at you. the light catches the amber flecks in his eyes.
you feel the weight of the question. your thoughts are currently a chaotic loop of his hand felt warm on mine and i don't want this project to end.
“mostly that i'm glad we got paired together,” you say, choosing the safest version of the truth. “even if ms. choi is a madwoman for doing this to us.”
jay laughs, but it’s a quiet, thoughtful sound. “yeah. she’s definitely crazy. but i think... i think i owe her a thank you note. i don't think i would've ever had the guts to just come up and talk to you otherwise. i always saw you in the halls, and i thought you seemed... cool. but you were always so quiet and had that 'don't bother me, i'm reading' look.”
“i do not have a 'don't bother me' look!” you protest, nudging him with your elbow.
“you totally do. it’s intimidating,” he insists. “but i’m glad i got past it. i like the 'bothering you' part of my day the best now.”
the afternoon fades into a soft orange glow. eventually, hunger wins out, and you head back to his house. mrs. park is out running errands, so the house is quiet and cool.
you end up in the kitchen again, making simple sandwiches while jay gives jiwoo a “bath” (wiping the doll down with the designated kit wipes). it feels domestic and easy. you find yourself humming a song as you plate the food, and jay catches your eye, a small, knowing smile on his face.
“what?” you ask, feeling your face heat up.
“nothing,” he says, shaking his head. “just... you're a good mom, jiwoo. your dad is lucky.”
“jay!”
“what? i'm just stating facts for the logbook,” he teases.
after eating, you sit on his living room floor, surrounded by textbooks you’re both pretending to read. in reality, you’re mostly talking. the conversation shifts to tomorrow — the match.
“it's at 10:00 a.m.,” jay says, his expression turning a bit more serious. “the scouts from the state university are going to be there. it’s the biggest game of the season so far. i’m... i’m actually pretty nervous.”
“you'll be great,” you say firmly. “i've seen you practice. you're the most dedicated person on that field. they'd be idiots not to see that.”
“will you really be there?” he asks, his voice low. “even though you don't have to be? the project is technically 'at home' on sundays.”
“i'll be there,” you promise. “front row. i’ll even bring a sign if you want, although sunghoon might try to steal the spotlight.”
“please don't bring a sign,” he laughs. “but just seeing you there... it'll help. a lot.”
as evening settles in, he drives you back to your house. the car ride is quieter than the one to the park, a comfortable, heavy silence filling the space. he pulls into your driveway and kills the engine, but neither of you moves to get out.
the streetlights are just starting to flicker on. jiwoo is asleep in the back, her little electronic breathing the only sound in the car.
jay turns in his seat, his arm resting on the back of yours. he looks like he wants to say something — his mouth opens, his brow furrows slightly, and his eyes search yours with an intensity that makes your breath hitch.
“hey,“ he says, his voice barely a whisper.
“yeah?“ your heart is thundering.
he reaches out, his thumb catching a stray lock of hair near your ear and tucking it back. his touch is lingering, his hand staying near your jaw for a second too long. the tension is so thick it feels like a physical thing between you, a cord pulling you closer.
“i...” he starts, his gaze dropping to your lips and then back to your eyes. he looks almost pained, like he's fighting an internal battle.
he stops. he swallows hard, his hand dropping back to the steering wheel.
“i'll... i'll see you tomorrow morning,” he says, his voice a bit strained. “10:00 a.m. don't forget the 'medicine' drops for jiwoo, just in case she gets fussy in the stands.”
you feel a wave of disappointment, followed by a rush of affection. he's chickening out. but in a way, it's endearing — the confident star athlete, reduced to nerves by a quiet junior.
“i won't forget,” you say, reaching for the door handle. “good luck tonight with her. and good luck tomorrow. you've got this.”
“thanks,“ he says, his eyes still fixed on you as you step out of the car.
you walk to your front door, feeling his gaze on your back. when you get inside, you watch from the window as his car pulls away. your heart is still racing, the memory of his hand near your face burning on your skin.
tomorrow is the last day. the project ends, the doll goes back, and the 'fake' family is over. but as you look at the last text he sends you before you go to bed — get some sleep, partner. see you at the kickoff — you know that whatever this is, it isn't fake at all.
-------
SUNDAY. DAY 7:
sunday morning arrives with a sky so blue it feels intentional, a backdrop designed for a series finale. you wake up before your alarm, the silence of the room feeling heavy now that jiwoo is with jay for the final morning. today is the day. the last day of the project, the big game, and the unspoken deadline for whatever has been growing between you and park jongseong.
you dress carefully — denim jacket, comfortable shoes, and your hair done just the way you know he likes it, even if he hasn’t said it out loud. your heart is already doing a nervous dance in your chest as you grab your bag and head to the stadium.
the high school bleachers are already filling up when you arrive. the air smells like cut grass, popcorn, and that electric, high-stakes tension that follows the football team everywhere. you spot the junior-senior crew almost immediately. yunjin is there, wearing a drama club hoodie but sitting suspiciously close to where sunghoon’s jersey is draped over a seat. sunoo is waving a literal foam finger, and kazuha is looking calm as ever, baby eunchae resting in the carrier between them.
“there she is!” sunoo yells, beckoning you over. “the woman of the hour! how are the nerves?”
“awful,” you admit, sliding into the seat beside them. “where’s jay?”
“down by the locker rooms,” yunjin says, nudging you with her elbow. “he’s been looking at the entrance every thirty seconds. you better go say hi before he pulls a muscle from craning his neck.”
you laugh, but you don't need to be told twice. you head down the bleachers toward the gated area where the players are doing their final warm-ups. jay is easy to find. he’s in full gear — jersey number tight across his shoulders, pads making him look even more imposing, cleats clicking on the pavement. he’s holding the carrier in one hand, looking slightly out of place amongst the hyper-masculine energy of the pre-game huddle.
when he sees you, the focused, 'footballer-mode' mask he wears completely shatters. his eyes light up, and he breaks away from a conversation with jake to jog toward you.
“you’re here,” he says, his voice a little breathless.
“i promised, didn’t i?” you smile, your heart doing a somersault.
he holds out the carrier, looking relieved. “coach said i have to hand her off now. i was worried you’d get stuck in traffic or something.”
you take the carrier from him, the weight familiar and grounding. you look down at the doll, then back up at him. a bit of mischief sparks in your brain, fueled by the adrenaline of the morning. you lift the carrier slightly, tilting jiwoo’s head toward jay.
“alright, jiwoo,” you say, pitching your voice into a high, silly, muppet-like squeak. “tell your dad what we practiced.”
jay blinks, a surprised laugh bubbling out of him.
you wiggle the carrier’s handle so the doll bounces. “you’re gonna do great, daddy!” you squeak in the cute voice. “go kick the ball really hard! make sure the scouts see how fast you are! we believe in you!”
jay is clutching his stomach, laughing so hard his ears have turned a bright, endearing shade of red. “oh my god, stop. you’re killing me.”
“we have a bet with sunghoon jr. that you’ll score two goals!” you continue, the muppet-voice getting even more ridiculous. “don’t let us down, big guy!”
jay reaches out, his hand covering yours on the carrier handle for a brief, warm second. his laughter subsides into a soft, glowing look that makes your breath catch. “thanks, jiwoo. and thanks... for being the weirdest, best partner ever.”
“go,” you say, your normal voice returning, soft and encouraging. “we’ll be right there in the front row.”
“watch me,” he says, and it feels like a promise.
the game is a blur of noise and color. you sit with the carrier on the seat beside you, your hands clenched in your lap. every time jay gets the ball, the crowd erupts, but your world narrows down to just him — the way he moves with a blend of power and grace, the way he communicates with his teammates, the sheer determination in his stride.
halfway through the second half, the score is tied. jay breaks through the defense, the ball a blur at his feet. he maneuvers past two defenders, the stadium holding its collective breath, and then — thud. the ball hits the back of the net.
the roar is deafening. jay is swarmed by his teammates, jake jumping on his back, sunghoon ruffling his hair. but as the team head back toward the center line, jay turns. he scans the bleachers with a frantic intensity until his eyes land right on you.
he raises a fist in the air, a bright, triumphant grin directed straight at your section. you’re blushing so furiously you feel like you might actually catch fire, but you’re cheering louder than anyone, holding jiwoo up like a tiny trophy.
by the time the whistle blows, they’ve won. the field is a sea of people, but you stay in your seat, waiting. you watched the scouts talk to him, watched his mom hug him, watched the team celebrate. slowly, the crowd thins out. your friends head to the parking lot, yunjin giving you a knowing wink as she drags sunoo and kazuha away.
“we’ll see you tomorrow at the hand-off!” she calls out.
finally, it’s just you, sitting in the quiet of the cooling afternoon, with jiwoo resting in her carrier. the shadows of the goalposts stretch long across the grass.
you hear the gate creak. jay is walking toward you. he’s changed out of his jersey into a simple school tee, his hair damp from a shower, his jacket slung over one shoulder. he looks exhausted, but there’s a glow about him that has nothing to do with the win.
he climbs the bleachers and slides into the row behind you, sitting so his knees are right next to your shoulders.
“hey,” he says, his voice low and intimate in the empty stadium.
“hey, star player,” you turn slightly to look at him. “the muppet-voice worked, i think.”
he laughs, a tired, happy sound. “it definitely did. i kept hearing it in my head every time i got near the goal.” he reaches down, his hand resting on the back of the seat next to yours. “scouts seemed happy. i think... i think the scholarship is safe.”
“i never doubted it,” you say softly.
the silence that follows isn’t awkward; it’s heavy. it’s the silence of a countdown.
“so,” jay says, his voice dropping an octave. “tomorrow morning. 8 a.m. ms. choi’s room. we give back the doll, she checks the final health score, and that’s... that’s the end of the project.”
“yeah,” you swallow. “back to normal life. no 2 a.m. logs. no shared calendars. no medicine drops.”
jay stares out at the empty field for a long time. his fingers trace the edge of the bleacher. “i was thinking about that. the 'back to normal' part.” he looks back at you, his expression guarded, shy in a way you’ve never seen him. “i don't think i like it.”
your heart starts to thud against your ribs. “you don’t?”
“no.” he lets out a sharp breath, rubbing the back of his neck. “this week was supposed to be a nightmare. i was so stressed about nationals and my grades, and then i got paired with this quiet girl i’d never spoken to, and i thought... great, another thing to juggle.”
he leans forward, his face closer to yours now. the scent of his soap — something clean and citrusy — drifts over you.
“but then we started talking,” he continues, his voice steadying. “and i started looking forward to the 2 a.m. texts. i started looking forward to walking you to class. i even liked the weird dinner at the diner where we pretended to be a real family.”
he pauses, his eyes searching yours, searching for permission to keep going. you can’t speak; you just nod, your pulse racing.
“i know the baby was fake,” jay says, his voice barely a whisper, thick with emotion. “the project was an assignment. the schedule was a requirement. but... i don’t think what happened between us this week was fake. i don't think the way i feel right now is part of the grade.”
you feel a tear prick at the corner of your eye — a mix of relief and overwhelming warmth. “jay...”
“i really like you,” he says, the words coming out in a rush, raw and honest. “not as a partner. not as 'the girl who’s good with dolls.' just you. i don’t want to go back to being the senior who only sees you in the hallway. i don’t want to stop having an excuse to talk to you.”
you reach out, your hand finding his on the bleacher. his skin is warm, and his fingers immediately lace through yours, tight and grounding.
“i was so scared,” you admit, your voice trembling. “i thought as soon as we handed jiwoo back, you’d just... go back to being the popular football guy and i’d be the quiet junior again. i didn’t want the week to end either. i like you too, jay. so much.”
the tension that has been building since monday — the accidental knee bumps, the car rides, the protective glances — finally snaps. jay leans in, his free hand reaching up to cuppe your cheek. his thumb brushes over your skin, his touch so gentle it makes you melt.
“is it okay if i kiss you?” he asks, his eyes searching yours one last time, his breath warm against your lips.
“yes,” you whisper.
he starts to lean in, his eyes fluttering shut. you close yours too, leaning forward, the world falling away until it’s just the two of you in the quiet stadium—
WAAAAAAAH! WAAAAAAAH! WAAAAAAAH!
the sound is like a physical blow. you both jump, nearly knocking heads. jay yelps, his hand flying back to the bleacher, while you scramble to look at the carrier.
jiwoo is screaming. not just a little fuss — this is the full-volume, 'i-haven't-been-fed-in-years' digital tantrum. her red lights are flashing like a police siren.
“no!” jay groans, throwing his head back and laughing in pure, frustrated disbelief. “not now! jiwoo, are you serious right now?”
you’re laughing too, doubled over, the tension broken by the sheer absurdity of it. “she knows! she’s jealous! she wants the attention back!”
“she’s a cockblocker,” jay mutters, though he’s grinning. “a plastic, electronic cockblocker.”
you fumbled for the bottle in the bag, clicking it into the doll’s mouth. the screaming stops, replaced by the aggressive, rhythmic sucking sound of the sensor registering the 'feeding.'
jay leans his forehead against your shoulder, still chuckling. “i can’t believe her. we were this close.”
“well,” you say, looking down at the doll, then back at the boy who just confessed his heart to you. “it’s part of the project, remember? 'responsibilities don’t wait until it’s convenient.'”
jay lifts his head, his eyes soft and bright. he reaches out, taking the bottle from you to hold it himself, his other hand moving back to your waist.
“fine,” he says, his voice low and playful. “we’ll finish the feeding. we’ll finish the project. but tomorrow, after we hand her back...”
he leans in again, this time stopping just an inch from your ear.
“...i’m taking you on a real date. no dolls. no logs. just us. and i’m going to finish what i started.”
you shiver, a smile spreading across your face. “i’d like that, jay.”
the sun disappears behind the horizon, leaving the stadium in a soft, purple twilight. as the doll makes a satisfied burp sound, jay pulls you into a hug, his chin resting on top of your head. the project is almost over, but as you sit there in the quiet together, you know that the 'real life' ms. choi talked about is just beginning. and for once, you aren't nervous about it at all.
-------
MONDAY. THE PROJECT ENDS:
monday morning feels different. the usual heavy dread that accompanies a school week has been replaced by a strange, bittersweet hum of finality. you stand in front of your mirror, adjusting your uniform one last time, and for a moment, your room feels too quiet. the gray carrier is gone — jay had it for the final night, even though you had originally planned on taking her — and the absence of that small, plastic weight on your chest feels like losing a limb.
as you walk to school, you see other juniors and seniors trudging toward the entrance, all of them carrying their respective 'babies' for the last time. the atmosphere in the hallways is a chaotic blend of relief and mourning. sunoo passes you near the lockers, looking like he’s aged ten years in seven days, but he’s wearing a triumphant grin.
“we’re free!” he shouts, pumping a fist in the air. “taehyun and i checked the score at midnight. 86%! we survived the apocalypse!”
you laugh, but your eyes are already scanning the crowd for a specific messy-haired senior. you find him standing right outside ms. choi’s door. jay is leaning against the wall, the carrier slung over his shoulder, looking every bit the star player who just won a game — relaxed, confident, and glowing. when his eyes land on you, that lopsided half-smile appears, the one that makes your heart do a triple-backflip.
“morning, partner,” he says, his voice low and warm as he steps away from the wall to meet you.
“morning,” you reply, feeling your face heat up as you remember what happened on the bleachers. “how was the final night?”
“she was an angel,” jay says, looking down at jiwoo. “i think she knew it was moving day. she stayed quiet all night. either that, or she felt bad for ruining the moment at the stadium.”
you giggle, nudging his arm. “don’t blame the baby. maybe she was just giving her dad some space to think.”
jay’s expression softens, and for a second, the bustling hallway fades away. he reaches out, his pinky finger hooking into yours for a brief, hidden moment. “i did a lot of thinking. and i’m ready for this to be over. the project, i mean. not the rest of it.”
the bell rings, sharp and insistent, breaking the spell.
ms. choi’s classroom has been transformed. the double desks are back in their original rows, and a large table at the front is lined with empty cardboard boxes, waiting to receive the electronic residents. ms. choi herself is practically vibrating with energy, wearing a bright floral dress and holding a clipboard like a trophy.
“alright, parents! settle down, settle down!” she claps her hands, the sound echoing with finality. “it’s the day we’ve all been waiting for. the day of liberation! please, bring your children to the front and place them in their respective bins. and don’t forget to leave your shared logbooks on my desk.”
the room erupts in a flurry of movement. it’s a parade of tired teenagers. jake and sunghoon walk up together, looking like they’ve just returned from a war zone.
“she called me ‘handsome’ in the logbook,” jake whispers loudly to ms. choi as he hands over his doll. “i think she’s going to miss me, ma'am. can i get a visitation schedule?”
ms. choi laughs, shaking her head. “sit down, mr. sim. your ‘child’ needs a factory reset, not a visit.”
you and jay walk up together. you place the logbook — filled with a week’s worth of late-night notes, frantic updates, and the occasional silly doodle jay had added during history — onto the stack. then, jay carefully lowers jiwoo into the box. for a second, he lingers, his hand resting on the doll’s head.
“see ya, kid,” he mutters.
as you head back to your seats, ms. choi starts pulling up the final data on the projector. the room goes silent as the health scores and participation metrics flicker across the screen.
“i have to say,” ms. choi begins, her eyes scanning the class with genuine pride. “i am incredibly impressed. every single year i do this project, and every year i expect chaos. but this group? you’ve shown remarkable maturity. even those of you i was… shall we say, concerned about.”
she looks pointedly at sunghoon and yunjin, who are sitting as far apart as possible while still sharing the desk.
“ms. huh, mr. park… a final health score of 82%. considering you spent half the week arguing over courtyard permits in the comments of your logbook, that is a miracle. i’m glad to see you could put aside your differences for the sake of your ‘son.’ although, sunghoon, perhaps next time don’t try to use the doll as a football? it was logged as a ‘high-impact incident.’”
the class roars with laughter as sunghoon turns a bright shade of red. yunjin just smirks. “he tried to teach him a header, ma’am. i had to intervene. i worry about sunghoon jr.'s safety.”
“and mr. kim, mr. kang,” ms. choi continues. “the most frequent loggers in history. 400 entries? i didn’t realize a doll could be fed every fifteen minutes. but your dedication to communication was top-tier.”
she moves down the list, teasing each pair with a mix of affection and wit. then, she stops. she looks at the top of the chart, where one pair sits with a staggering 96% health score.
“and finally… our star parents.” she gestures toward you and jay.
you feel every eye in the room turn toward you. jay shifts in his seat, clearing his throat, but he doesn’t look away.
“96%,” ms. choi muses, a playful glint in her eye. “not only was the health near perfect, but the logbook was… well, it was a narrative. i particularly enjoyed the entry where mr. park explained the history of football to a doll at three in the morning to get it to stop crying. and the photo of you two at the diner? very authentic.”
she leans against her desk, her smile turning soft. “it’s clear that some of you took the ‘life skills’ part of this assignment very seriously. you didn’t just manage a doll; you managed each other. and i think,” she looks between you and jay, her voice dropping to a theatrical whisper, “that some of those skills might translate quite well into the real world. wouldn't you agree, jay?”
jay rubs the back of his neck, his ears turning pink, but he catches your eye and winks. “best partner i could’ve asked for, ms. choi.”
“well!” ms. choi claps her hands again. “the grades are posted. you are all free to go. but remember — life doesn’t stop being busy just because the doll is gone. keep looking after each other.”
as the bell rings, the room explodes. people are hugging, high-fiving, and sprinting for the door. it’s a mass exodus of relief.
you and jay take your time packing your bags. the silence between you is heavy again, but it’s a good kind of heavy. the “fake” part of your life is officially over, and the “real” part is waiting outside the door.
“so,” jay says, slinging his bag over his shoulder. “no baby. no logbook. no ms. choi breathing down our necks.”
“yeah,” you say, looking up at him. “what now?”
jay reaches out, taking your hand in his — not for a moment, and not hidden. he laces his fingers with yours right there in the middle of the empty classroom.
“now,” he says, his eyes focused on yours with that same intensity from the stadium. “i take you to the courtyard. we sit in the sun. and i don’t have to check a phone once.”
the walk through the hallways feels like a victory lap. you see jake and sunoo arguing about who had the harder night shifts, and you see yunjin and sunghoon actually talking — really talking — near the drama hall. the school feels smaller, friendlier.
when you reach the courtyard, the spring sun is warm on your skin. you find a quiet bench under a cherry blossom tree, the petals beginning to drift down like pink snow. jay sits close, his shoulder pressed against yours, his hand still holding yours tightly.
“it’s weird, isn’t it?” he asks, looking out at the grass. “not having to worry about a crying sound every five minutes.”
“it’s a little too quiet,” you admit. “i keep thinking i hear her.”
jay pulls your hand up, resting it on his knee. “i’m glad we did it. even the 3 a.m. shifts. it was the best week i’ve had since i moved here.”
“even with the football stress?”
“especially with the football stress,” he says, turning to face you. “because i wasn’t doing it alone. i’ve spent four years trying to be the guy who has everything under control by himself. the project showed me that... i’m better when i’m half of a team.”
he reaches up with his free hand, his fingers tracing the line of your jaw, just like he had at the stadium. but this time, there are no bleachers, no crowds, and no electronic babies waiting to interrupt.
“i really meant it, you know,” he whispers, his face inches from yours. “what i said yesterday. i don't want to go back to how things were.”
“me neither,” you breathe, your heart pounding a rhythm of pure, unadulterated joy.
jay leans in, and this time, the world stays silent. when his lips finally meet yours, it’s soft, tentative, and tastes like the mint gum he always chews and the promise of something real.
when he pulls back, he’s grinning, his eyes bright. “ninety-six percent health score,” he mutters against your forehead. “but i think the relationship score is a hundred.”
you laugh inevitably, leaning your head on his shoulder as the cherry blossoms fall around you. the baby project is over, but as you sit there in the sun with jay, you know that the real work — the beautiful, messy, wonderful work of being together — is only just beginning.
Synopsis: The kids are never scolded by Jake, but when their behaviour affects you he doesn’t come to play.
Requested by anon. I was really struggling to imagine how Jake would react to “shut up, mom!” I just can’t see him as a scolding father, he just seems way too soft. He would be all smiley and always trying the way-too-gentle route whenever his children misbehaved. Which would result in his children NOT taking him serious whatsoever, and his scolding would never work on them. That’s unless his wife is involved. Then I had an idea… and then a reaction turned into a whole fic.
𓈒⠀𓂃⠀˖⠀𓇬⠀˖⠀⠀𓂃⠀𓈒𓈒⠀𓂃⠀⠀˖⠀𓇬⠀˖⠀⠀𓂃⠀𓈒𓈒⠀𓂃⠀⠀˖⠀𓇬⠀˖⠀𓂃⠀𓈒
“No! Mine!” Your two year old screamed.
“It’s mine!” His older brother cried.
A loud thud followed by a shrill cry, finalizing the chaos that had been going on for hours, no, the whole day. You gasped, quickly pushing yourself up from the chair—its legs screeched on the kitchen tiles from the abruptness. Well, as quickly as you could with your 8 month old pregnant belly.
Jake put a gentle hand on your shoulder, "I've got this."
"But-" He didn't let you finish as he swang the dishtowel he was using on his shoulder and pushed you gently down with both of his warm, assuring hands. "Stay put," he ordered, before he pressed a kiss on your forehead and marched his way to the living room.
"Okey, my little gremlins!"
You sighed, already knowing where this was leading to.
"Okey, okey." Jake's soft voice mixed with the obnoxious loud screams of your sons. "Everybody, calm down." He knelt down in front of them, holding his hands up, trying to calm the tension.
Your five year old, Hyeyun, began to scream loudly, hot tears forming in his eyes due to frustration. Then he hit his brother with the Superman toy they were fighting over. Jake’s eyes widened, alarming.
"Hey, buddy." He reached out for Hyeyun’s arm. "Don't hit your brother, yeah?" His voice was too soft, too loving to actually make him stop. And his hand was not forceful enough.
Your (for now) youngest screamed at the attack and launched at the elder in aggression.
“Aghhh!!!”
Fists, nails, teeth, really anything, were used. "Doyun, buddy." Jake's gentle hands tried to pull him away.
But yet again, he was being too soft and too gentle to seperate them.
"We don't use violence," he tried again, hands going between the two boys, but they were ultimately also bitten and scratched.
"BOTH STOP BEFORE I LOSE MY GODDAMN MIND!"
Everybody—including Jake—flinched at that. You yanked the toy forcefully away, the boys sure as hell held onto it with all of their strength. You already felt the energy draining out of your body. You definitely weren't supposed to be doing all of this at your vulnerable state.
Yet somehow, even though you used your most frightening voice, they managed to scream and fight again.
Doyun’s fist flew right in his hyung’s face.
Maybe it happened because of the ongoing chaos during the whole day. Maybe because you were so exhausted, and the boys felt that their mommy wasn’t giving them the attention like she used to. Or maybe because their dad never really scolded them and, thus, gave them unwillingly a green light to be troublemakers.
“Doyun! Stop right now!”
Your eyes stung, frustration bubbled in your chest.
You loved Jake. You really did. He was the best husband and father you could've ever imagined. But you just wished he would get mad once. Just once be the frightening father.
He was always way too soft with your boys. Naturally, it became your job to be the scolding parent.
And now that they were getting older, you began to realize how they started to favour their dad over you. I mean, of course, children would prefer the always smiley, happy parent, who could never say no to their round eyes and pouty faces, melting his heart with a ‘daddy, pwease.’
It was natural that they would like the parent more who let them eat ice-cream before dinner, who let them stay up late at night, or let them put their vegetables on his own plate.
Rather than the parent who made the rules and boundaries clear, who took away the ice cream before they could dig in, who made them wear three layers of clothes even though they were 'tough guys and could handle the cold', who furrowed her eyebrows at them most of the time — more than she intended to.
People on the outside, like your parents, loved your parenting dynamic. A bad and a good cop. One parent the children respected — who would shape them into disciplined, mannered young men. And the other parent who they could play with freely; who would fill their childhood with happiness and laughter.
The perfect balance.
But to you, sometimes, there was no real balance. It felt as if, when it came to the boys being rowdy and disobedient, you were the only one who was really parenting. And you knew he would be devastated if you told him exactly that, so you never worded it like that.
Don't get it wrong, Jake was not an absent parent, he just didn't know how to be strict.
You tried to tell him, especially now that you were pregnant, that you didn't have the energy to scold them and that he needed to be the one who told them no whenever it was appropriate.
Of course Jake, ever the attentive and loving husband, listened and nodded. He kissed the back of your hand and told you not to worry, that he got your back and that you were a team. Which is why he made his way out of the kitchen to handle the fight. Or any fights after you had your talk.
Until now, he wasn't really successful, and you always had to step in—despite his efforts.
Jake watched your lips tremble, a hand on your hip as your throat bobbed to swallow down the lump forming there.
"No more toy! No more screaming and crying-! No more talkin at all! And no more TV for one week!" You inhaled sharply, trying to stop yourself from bursting into tears.
The boys stopped for a moment. Jake watched you with big, sorry eyes.
“NOO!!” Here came the loud protest.
For a second, your vision blurred. The noise was too much. Your head began to spin. The feeling of dread spread through your veins.
You turned around, a hand holding your face, as the other, who held Superman, came to your round belly instinctively. Jake stood up immediately, concern taking over him.
"Jake, give them some toast for dinner and bring them to bed."
"NO! I DON'T WANT TOAST! I'M NOT GOING TO BED!" Hyeyun screamed, hot tears flowing down his face as he stomped his foot.
The younger one copied his behaviour, equally angry. “NO SWEEP!! NO!!”
"Do not!” Your head snapped back, a crease formed between your eyebrows, “do not talk back! Both of you!”
The overstimulation started to become too much.
“SHUT UP! I HATE YOU!” Hyeyun screamed.
Jake's eyes widened in shock, his mouth agape in disbelief.
Your heart cracked open.
That’s when you couldn't hold it in anymore. Your hands cupped your face, letting the toy fall on the ground as you just sobbed loudly.
How could this happen? Weren't you doing enough?
What am I doing wrong?
You were so tired.
Jake quickly went to you, "baby..." he pulled you in his arms. Your head nestled in his neck as your body continued to shake from the sobs. "Baby, shh... it's okey, it's okey," he stroke your hair to calm you down.
His intial shock turned into worry as he registered how badly you were shaking and sobbing. He tightened his hold around you and turned to look at his sons with a deep frown. Who had gone mute all of the sudden.
"Don't you ever talk to your mother like that again!" His eyes darkened.
"You two have been fighting and screaming the whole day! Don't you know your mom's pregnant?! You are stressing her so much, it's really dangerous for her health! You are not only putting her in danger but also your little sister! We have told you that a million times before, but you never seem to listen nor to care!"
The boys looked at him with round, shaky eyes. They have never seen their dad angry. The crease between Jake’s eyebrows deepened even more.
"Hyeyun." The boy flinched at his stern tone. "You will never talk to your mom like that ever again. No son of mine will ever be disrespectful towards my wife. You will never tell her again to shut up. Got it?"
Hyeyun’s lips wobbled in fear.
Your heart clenched painfully at the reminder of your son’s words.
I hate you. Shut up.
A louder sob left your mouth.
Where did you go wrong? You only tried your best. And that’s the result of all your hard work?
His attention immediately went back to his wife. "Hey... it's okey," he kissed your head, "it's okey. Deep breaths, honey. Take deep breaths." He rubbed his hand on your quivering back, your hiccups worrying him as the minutes went by.
Every sob, every tear drained more and more energy from you. Your head was spinning from the on going fights and screaming.
Then, suddenly, everything went dark.
“Yn!” He called out as you slumped in his arms. His heart sank in his stomach.
“Hey, hey, hey.” His arms tightened around, holding you impossibly closer. He tapped your cheek lightly with his open palm, “baby, wake up.” His tone strained.
Your eyes lazily blinked open. Your glassy eyes looked at him, your vision fuzzy.
He carefully guided you to the couch, almost carrying you by the way his arms were wrapped around you. "Careful, baby.” You leaned against the backrest, closing your eyes, hoping the dizziness stopped.
"Drink some water." Your eyes fluttered open, only then did you spot your children watching the whole scene, the fear was evident in their faces. Instant worry took over you, your children shouldn't be seeing this. You tried to sit up but you felt too lightheaded.
"What are you doing? Lay back." Jake’s voice was laced with worry and frustration. His comforting hand guided you to lay back. He brought the glass of water to your lips, "drink."
"Go to your room, boys," Jake ordered, he didn’t turn around to look at them.
“But-“ Hyeyun started.
“Now.” His tone firm, there was no room for discussion. “Don’t make me repeat myself.”
“I’m really disappointed in you guys today.” He spoke as he entered the kids’ bedroom. Jake’s eyes weren’t sparkling like they usually did around his children. The boys understood right away that their dad was angry at them.
Doyun began to wail. Through a heavy sigh, Jake knelt down and pulled him in his arms. In response, his tiny arms immediately wrapped around his neck.
Later that night, you were lying in your bed in your husband's arms. You were feeling a lot better now.
After he had talked with the boys, he changed them into their pyjamas, fed them, brushed their teeth and hair. Then he had done the same to you, and you didn't bother to protest, all of your energy was flushed away anyways.
"Were they really okey?" You muffled against his shirt for the 50th time, your eyes misty.
"Yes, honey," his lips brushed your forehead, resting them there as he reassured you patiently for the 50th time. He didn't bother to tell you that Hyeyun didn't say a single word whilst Doyun was crying the whole time, calling for his mama. He knew you had heard it anyways, so why sadden your heart even more than it already was?
"And they fell asleep?"
"Yes, my love, I checked earlier."
"Are you sure they ate enough before going to bed? You gave them more than just toast, right? I didn't mean that-"
He hummed sleepily against your forehead, "they had a feast, baby."
You let out a shaky breath against his neck, "it feels so wrong to go to bed without kissing them good night."
Silence echoed through the house. Your ears were alert to any noises coming from your sons' bedroom, but there weren't any.
"It's okey, we will talk with them tomorrow, alright?" He kissed your eyebrow, closing his eyes as the exhaustion of the day was catching up on him.
You on the other hand couldn't fall asleep. You hated going to bed with unresolved conflicts, be it with your husband or parents, above all with the most precious lights of your life. So you waited for your husband’s breath to even out and his chest under your head to follow the usual, soft rhythm, before you would stand up and tiptoe to your sons' room. He would never allow you to get up from the bed after you fainted today.
You slowly removed yourself from your husband, pushing the blanket away in the quietest motion possible.
Just as you were about to sit up, a hand wrapped around your swollen belly, stopping you. “Where are you going?”
You gasped softly. “I thought you were sleeping-“
“Yn. You’re not getting out of this bed.”
“But-“
“No buts.” He laid you back in his arms, one hand holding protectively your pregnant belly.
“But I just wanna check on the boys-“
“Yn, no.” His voice strained from frustration.
He was not frustrated at you. He was disappointed in himself. And he didn’t understand why you couldn’t understand him right now. That he didn’t want to risk you getting hurt again. The guilt was eating him alive. It was his fault that you fainted. He should’ve taken care of you better.
“But why-“
“Can’t you just stop??”
You stiffened in his hold. He closed his eyes briefly, frustrated at himself for taking it out on you. Your hand was about to push his away from your belly, wanting to distance yourself. But before you could do it, he tightened his arms even more around you.
“I’m sorry,” he rasped. “Baby…” he tucked your face in the crook of his neck, pressing a kiss on your temple. “I’m sorry.” He repeated. Your hand curled in his shirt.
When you didn’t respond, he tried again. “I’m sorry, okey?” He felt your head nodding against his neck. “I just don’t want to risk you getting hurt again, okey? We’re all tired, and the kids are already sleeping, baby. We will talk with them tomorrow. After you rested properly.”
You let out a small, hoarse “okey.”
He pressed a lingering and soothing kiss on your forehead. “I love you, my love.”
“I love you too.”
Tomorrow, you thought as you closed your eyes, your husband’s kiss on your forehead lulling you to sleep.
"Mommy?"
You and Jake jerked in each others embrace, the sudden voice in your bedroom startled you. "Fu- Doyun! You scared me." Jake clutched his chest dramatically.
You sat up quickly, worry taking over as you saw the silhouette of your son standing there at the door. “What's wrong, baby?" You opened your arms, “come here.” Doyun climbed on the bed and nestled himself between his parents, right in your arms. Jake turned on the bedside lamp, that's when you spotted Hyeyun standing in the hallway, near the door. His eyes were filled with tears, lips trembled in a pout.
"Hyeyun, baby... what are you doing there?" You stretched out your arm for him. He hesitated for a second. Then he gave in and broke down completely. "Mommy!" He rushed to you. Jake quickly put a hand on your swollen belly, protecting it from any impact.
"MOMMY!" Both boys wailed in your arms.
You chuckled softly, kissing both of their foreheads.
"I'm- I'm sorry," Hyeyun hiccuped.
"Sowwy!" Doyun sobbed.
"It's okey, my boys. I forgive you, hm?"
Doyun was about to climb on your lap when Jake pulled him back on the bed, "Doyun, be careful of your sister." The little one shot him a stubborn glare before whipping his head to you. His big eyes looked at you, pleading, "mommy?". You chuckled softly, "let's lay down together, okey?"
With that both of your boys snuggled against your sides.
Hyeyun wrapped his arms around your neck, "I'm sorry for the b-bad thing I said. I- I promise I won't ever say it again."
"I forgive you, my love." You kissed his cheek. "Mommy is not mad, okey?"
“I- I promise from now on, I- I will take care of my little sister! I will be the best big brother an- and protect her and help you with her!”
You chuckled softly, your heart swelling in awe.
“Me too!” Doyun added.
You caressed Hyeyun’s hair gently, “where did you learn this from?”
“Daddy!”
“Yeah? Is this what daddy had told you to do?” He nodded earnestly. Your eyes crinkled with amusement, “did daddy scold you, boys?”
Doyun gasped dramatically, “he scowlded us soooooooo much!!! He was so angwy!!!”
You faced your husband with a smirk, “daddy showed you a new side of himself, hm?” Jake’s eyes sparkled proudly, suppressing a smile.
“He was really really angry and told us that we have to be more re-repondle?”
“Responsible.” You helped.
“And he said we have to be good brothers.”
“-and good sons!-“ Doyun added.
“And he said we have to take care of our baby sister in your belly and cuddle your belly and-“ he snuggled against your round belly, his voice lowering to a hushed tone now, “and talk quietly so the baby isn’t scared.”
“Dada said we’re rweal men if we take cware of mommy.” Doyun whispered enthusiastically.
“Did dada really say all of this?” You gazed at Jake. He shrugged his shoulder with a smug expression, clearly feeling himself.
“Yes!”
“Then I have to give dada a reward for this, don’t I?”
You leaned in to give Jake a kiss, the boys were too busy cuddling your belly to notice the love eyes their parents were exchanging.
If Jake had known that this would be your reaction to him disciplining your sons, then he would’ve been the scolding parent all along.
Pairings: cold!husband!riki x wife!reader
Synopsis: A work dinner turns into something more as another man tries to get close to you which fuels your husband and leads to jealousy.
Warnings: nothing-? just riki is really rich, kisses-? jealousy?
Wordcount: short for you to read honey ;)
continuation of the cold husband riki series, can be read as a stand alone
The clock hit 9:00 p.m. before you knew it.
The hall was quiet except for the show playing which you didn't really care about. You get up and leave to the kitchen.
The food made by your chefs was neatly plated and kept for you to eat but you just went to the refridgirator to get water.
You didn't really feel like eating.
Atleast not alone.
Riki still was at work. He intimidated you about how he'll be late today.
Bisco was sleeping on the couch with a pillow under and blankets surrounding him as if he were a king. (He most definitely is)
You keep the bottle on the counter as you go through your phone.
The door clicks open.
You keep your phone face down on the counter and shuffle towards the hall where you see Bisco awake.
Bisco was trying to fight sleep so that he could get down and see his daddy.
You chuckle at his attempts and quickly take him into your hands where he immediately melts and keep his head on your shoulder as you rub his furry back.
You quickly pad your way to the front door to see riki removing his shoes and blaxer.
He looked up feeling your presence fill in.
"How was work?" he asked as he came closer.
"Work was alright" you say as you keep your hand on his shoulder and give him a peck.
He leaned down for you and then gave a kiss to Bisco who raised his head.
You take the blazer from his hands as he lifted Bisco in his hands.
He moved to sit on the couch as you threw the blazer in the laundry basket upstairs.
"Did you eat?" you ask coming down.
"I'm hungry" he replies as you stand infront of him and brush his hair back.
He sighs at your touch and closes his eyes momentarily.
"Go freshen up first" you say as you bring your hand to his cheek and caress it.
The car ride was calm like usual.
You both were going to a business dinner of Riki's. You were wearing a wine dress which was pretty modest with them being off-shoulder.
Both of you weren't talking just enjoying the silence.
The restaurant arrived before you knew it.
It was high-end. Of course it was.
Crystal lights, polished floors, people dressed like they owned entire companies—because they probably did.
And Riki?
He didn’t look like he belonged there. He looked like he owned the place. His hand rested lightly on your lower back as he guided you inside. Not possessive—just… there.
Like a reminder. You stayed close. People greeted him immediately.
“Mr. Nishimura, it’s an honor—”
He nodded once. No smile.
Cold. Efficient. Perfect.
You stood beside him, fingers lightly gripping the sleeve of his suit. Not out of nervousness—you just liked being close.
He noticed.
His hand shifted from your back to your wrist for a second. A gentle squeeze.
Dinner was… business.
Talk of investments, expansions, numbers you didn’t fully care about—but you listened anyway, watching him more than the conversation.
Riki in his element was terrifying.
Calm voice. Sharp words. No wasted expressions.
Men twice his age leaned in when he spoke.
And yet—
His hand never left you.
Resting on your thigh under the table now.
Rest of the night flowed quickly, you spoke when needed while indulging in conversations.
People were... impressed to say the least. But then again, they expect nothing less when the talk is about Mr.Nishimura Riki's wife.
But one of the businessmen was a little too impressed.
And Riki? Oh he noticed. Noticed from the moment you entered the dinner, when you sat at the table chatting away, when you leaned into him when to calm yourself, when you were enjoying your meal that, that man was eyeing you up.
Seizing you in a way he didn't really like.
Everyone were bidding their goodbye, just few last minute convos about the new project or the rising companies. Riki too, was engaged in one of them while you were waiting for him as you were done for the night.
Your social battery ran out and you weren't really interested to talk with anyone.
Just then, a hand was gently placed on your back.
It wasn't Riki's. You could tell.
You turn around to see Mr.Kim, the man who was eyeing you the whole night.
You give a small smile as you raise your brows wondering what he wanted.
"Hello, Mrs.Y/n. Nice to finally meet you." he says smiling.
"Nice to meet you too Mr.Kim, what's got you here?"
He chuckles modestly, "Oh well, just wanted to give you some company. I must say, you’ve been the most interesting person in this room tonight.”
His eyes linger a second too long—not inappropriate, but enough to make something in your chest tighten. Not fear… not exactly. Just awareness.
You let out a soft, polite laugh, tilting your head slightly.
“Interesting?” you echo, a hint of curiosity laced with caution.
Mr. Kim hums, taking a small step closer—but still respectful, still careful.
“Most people here are predictable. Business talk, fake smiles, rehearsed laughs.” His gaze studies you, almost like he’s trying to solve something. “But you… you’ve been watching. Thinking.”
Your smile doesn’t drop—but it stills.
He noticed.
Before you can respond, he adds lightly, “And standing next to him all evening, yet somehow looking completely… detached"
You straighten just a little, your voice calm.
“People see what they want to see, Mr. Kim.”
A flicker of amusement crosses his face. “True. But I prefer seeing what others try to hide.”
For a brief second, silence settles between you—thick, unreadable.
Then— “Careful.”
The voice is low. Familiar. Cold.
Riki.
You’re about to step back when— “Take your hand off.”
The voice is quiet. But it cuts clean through the moment but Mr. Kim doesn’t move immediately.
Instead, his gaze shifts to Riki, a faint smile still playing on his lips.
“I was just—”
Riki doesn’t let him finish.
His hand comes to your waist, pulling you a fraction closer to him—subtle to outsiders, undeniable to you.
“I said,” his voice drops, quieter now, but far more dangerous,
“take. your hand. off.”
A pause.
The room suddenly feels too still.
Mr. Kim studies him for a second longer… then slowly lifts his hand away from your back, as if indulging him.
“No harm meant,” he says lightly.
But the damage is already done.
Riki’s grip on your waist tightens—not painfully, but enough to ground you… to claim you.
To remind you.
His thumb presses into your side once, controlled—yet not gentle.
Mr. Kim exhales, slipping his hands into his pockets. “I was only keeping your wife company.”
Riki tilts his head slightly, eyes unreadable.
“I don’t recall needing help.”
The air between them sharpens.
Mr. Kim lets out a quiet chuckle, taking a step back.
“Of course. My mistake.”
His gaze flickers to you one last time—this time, more careful.
“Enjoy your evening, Mrs. Y/n.”
And then he walks away. But the tension doesn’t leave.
Riki doesn’t move. His hand is still on your waist.
Your back still remembers the warmth that wasn’t his.
A few seconds pass before he finally leans in—close enough that only you can hear him.
His voice is soft. Too soft.
“Did you like it?”
A pause.
His thumb presses slightly deeper into your side.
“Or should I break his hand for touching you?”
Your lips twitch before you can stop yourself.
“...You’re funny,” you say under your breath.
It slips out lighter than the tension wrapped around you.
For a second—just a second—you think you might’ve softened it.
Riki goes still. Not relaxed. Stil.
The kind of stillness that makes your stomach drop.
Slowly, he pulls back just enough to look at you—really look at you.
There’s no smile on his face. Just something quiet… and sharp.
“Funny?” he repeats softly.
His thumb drags once against your side, slower this time—not rough, but deliberate.
“You think I’m joking.”
It’s not a question. The air between you tightens, like something unseen is pulling it taut.
Behind you, the music continues, people laugh, glasses clink— But right here, it feels like everything’s gone silent.
Riki’s gaze flickers briefly to where Mr. Kim disappeared… then back to you. And something in his expression shift.
He leans in again, closer than before—his voice barely above a whisper against your ear.
“Say that again.”
A pause. His hand tightens just slightly at your waist.
“Tell me I’m funny.”
Not loud. Not aggressive.
But there’s something in it that makes it very clear— He’s not asking for a joke anymore.
The tension hangs for a second longer—
Then you cut through it.
“Okay… let’s just go home,” you say quietly.
Before he can respond, you lean in and press a quick, soft peck to his lips.
Riki freezes.
Not like before—this isn’t that cold, dangerous stillness.
This is different. Unexpected.
His grip on your waist loosens just a fraction, like his mind is catching up to what just happened.
You pull back slightly, watching him. For a moment, he just looks at you. Unreadable.
Then his eyes drop—just for a second—to your lips.
Something shifts.
When he looks back at you, his expression is calmer… but not soft.
Controlled, again—but quieter now.
His hand moves from your waist to your lower back, guiding—not forcing, just… deciding.
“Fine.”
A pause.
Then, softer—almost under his breath—
“Stay close.”
He says as he presses a kiss to your forehead.
He leads you through the crowd, his hand never leaves you this time.
Not even for a second. And just before you reach the exit, his fingers press lightly against your back— Right where Mr. Kim’s hand had been.
Not rough. Not angry. But deliberate.
Like he’s erasing something only he noticed.
Like he remembers exactly where someone else touched— And doesn’t plan on forgetting it anytime soon.
.
for more of this....... check out : cold husband riki series
A/N: woah, finally. thats out. uhm published this only cause @leonykennedy said she missed cold husband riki series! not proofread. hahaha ily guys sm uhhhhh ye, thanksss nd stay hydratedddd.
you looked up from the couch just in time to see heeseung standing there, hair messy, hoodie half zipped, and a soft, lazy smile on his face.
"hi, baby." he said, dragging it out a little as he kicked his shoes off.
he walked straight over and dropped down beside you, immediately wrapping his arms around your waist and leaning his head against your shoulder.
you let out a small laugh. "you're drunk.."
"yeah.." he admitted quietly, holding you a little tighter. "missed you.."
you brushed his hair back. "i missed you too.."
there was a pause before you shifted slightly.
he tightened his hold instantly.
"don't move.." he said, voice low and a bit rough.
you smiled. "hee, i'm just turning."
"still.." he said, not loosening his grip on you.
you shook your head a little. "you need to go to bed."
he finally looked up at you, eyes a bit unfocused but still serious.
"no." he said simply.
you blinked. "no?"
"not yet.." he added, staying close, arms still locked around your waist.
you laughed softly. "you're refusing to go to bed?"
he didn't answer right away, just leaned back into your shoulder again like that was his final decision.
"stay here.." he said after a second.
"we can go to bed and stay together there, baby." you said gently.
he paused, considering it, but shook his head.
"i'm fine here.."
you sighed, but you were smiling. "you're impossible, mr lee."
he didn't respond, just held you tighter again like that solved all of his problems.
"i'll get you water first.." you said.
the moment you tried to stand, his hands stayed at your waist, following you so you couldn't fully get away.
"dont.." he said, quieter now.
"i'm literally two steps away."
he hesitated for a second, then slowly let you. but his fingers still caught your sleeve until you were fully standing.
when you came back, he drank it while leaning against you, then immediately went back to holding your waist.
after a while, you tried again.
"you need to go to bed, baby."
he shook his head.
"hee.." you said softly.
he looked at you, still tired and warm from the alcohol. he repeated it again, like he was a radio.
"not yet.."
"okay.."
eventually, you stood and this time he followed you without arguing, just staying close the whole way.
once you got to the bed, he finally let you pull him down with you. his arm stayed around your waist as he lay beside you, his head resting against your shoulder.
"better?" you asked.
he nodded once.
"yeah.."
and after a moment, he finally relaxed, still holding you, but silent now.
花 ──── requested 🥹 ++ i couldn't do a moodboard bc for some reason the pics weren't working sighhhh
hey so like i love your cold husband Niki series and it’s amazing and I love it and I love you🫵🫰pls never stop writing cold husband Niki series because I love it and I love you
also do you take requests for the cold husband Niki series???? because I may have a few thoughts and ideas! thank youuuu
HIHI!!
ahhhhhh tysmm babyy, ilysmm. trusttt, ill never stop writing the cold husband riki series!!
ILYTOO BABY
yess, i doo take requests for the series!! pour all ur thoughts nd ideas in my inbox baby~
Pairings: cold!husband!riki x wife!reader
Synopsis: A work dinner turns into something more as another man tries to get close to you which fuels your husband and leads to jealousy.
Warnings: nothing-? just riki is really rich, kisses-? jealousy?
Wordcount: short for you to read honey ;)
continuation of the cold husband riki series, can be read as a stand alone
The clock hit 9:00 p.m. before you knew it.
The hall was quiet except for the show playing which you didn't really care about. You get up and leave to the kitchen.
The food made by your chefs was neatly plated and kept for you to eat but you just went to the refridgirator to get water.
You didn't really feel like eating.
Atleast not alone.
Riki still was at work. He intimidated you about how he'll be late today.
Bisco was sleeping on the couch with a pillow under and blankets surrounding him as if he were a king. (He most definitely is)
You keep the bottle on the counter as you go through your phone.
The door clicks open.
You keep your phone face down on the counter and shuffle towards the hall where you see Bisco awake.
Bisco was trying to fight sleep so that he could get down and see his daddy.
You chuckle at his attempts and quickly take him into your hands where he immediately melts and keep his head on your shoulder as you rub his furry back.
You quickly pad your way to the front door to see riki removing his shoes and blaxer.
He looked up feeling your presence fill in.
"How was work?" he asked as he came closer.
"Work was alright" you say as you keep your hand on his shoulder and give him a peck.
He leaned down for you and then gave a kiss to Bisco who raised his head.
You take the blazer from his hands as he lifted Bisco in his hands.
He moved to sit on the couch as you threw the blazer in the laundry basket upstairs.
"Did you eat?" you ask coming down.
"I'm hungry" he replies as you stand infront of him and brush his hair back.
He sighs at your touch and closes his eyes momentarily.
"Go freshen up first" you say as you bring your hand to his cheek and caress it.
The car ride was calm like usual.
You both were going to a business dinner of Riki's. You were wearing a wine dress which was pretty modest with them being off-shoulder.
Both of you weren't talking just enjoying the silence.
The restaurant arrived before you knew it.
It was high-end. Of course it was.
Crystal lights, polished floors, people dressed like they owned entire companies—because they probably did.
And Riki?
He didn’t look like he belonged there. He looked like he owned the place. His hand rested lightly on your lower back as he guided you inside. Not possessive—just… there.
Like a reminder. You stayed close. People greeted him immediately.
“Mr. Nishimura, it’s an honor—”
He nodded once. No smile.
Cold. Efficient. Perfect.
You stood beside him, fingers lightly gripping the sleeve of his suit. Not out of nervousness—you just liked being close.
He noticed.
His hand shifted from your back to your wrist for a second. A gentle squeeze.
Dinner was… business.
Talk of investments, expansions, numbers you didn’t fully care about—but you listened anyway, watching him more than the conversation.
Riki in his element was terrifying.
Calm voice. Sharp words. No wasted expressions.
Men twice his age leaned in when he spoke.
And yet—
His hand never left you.
Resting on your thigh under the table now.
Rest of the night flowed quickly, you spoke when needed while indulging in conversations.
People were... impressed to say the least. But then again, they expect nothing less when the talk is about Mr.Nishimura Riki's wife.
But one of the businessmen was a little too impressed.
And Riki? Oh he noticed. Noticed from the moment you entered the dinner, when you sat at the table chatting away, when you leaned into him when to calm yourself, when you were enjoying your meal that, that man was eyeing you up.
Seizing you in a way he didn't really like.
Everyone were bidding their goodbye, just few last minute convos about the new project or the rising companies. Riki too, was engaged in one of them while you were waiting for him as you were done for the night.
Your social battery ran out and you weren't really interested to talk with anyone.
Just then, a hand was gently placed on your back.
It wasn't Riki's. You could tell.
You turn around to see Mr.Kim, the man who was eyeing you the whole night.
You give a small smile as you raise your brows wondering what he wanted.
"Hello, Mrs.Y/n. Nice to finally meet you." he says smiling.
"Nice to meet you too Mr.Kim, what's got you here?"
He chuckles modestly, "Oh well, just wanted to give you some company. I must say, you’ve been the most interesting person in this room tonight.”
His eyes linger a second too long—not inappropriate, but enough to make something in your chest tighten. Not fear… not exactly. Just awareness.
You let out a soft, polite laugh, tilting your head slightly.
“Interesting?” you echo, a hint of curiosity laced with caution.
Mr. Kim hums, taking a small step closer—but still respectful, still careful.
“Most people here are predictable. Business talk, fake smiles, rehearsed laughs.” His gaze studies you, almost like he’s trying to solve something. “But you… you’ve been watching. Thinking.”
Your smile doesn’t drop—but it stills.
He noticed.
Before you can respond, he adds lightly, “And standing next to him all evening, yet somehow looking completely… detached"
You straighten just a little, your voice calm.
“People see what they want to see, Mr. Kim.”
A flicker of amusement crosses his face. “True. But I prefer seeing what others try to hide.”
For a brief second, silence settles between you—thick, unreadable.
Then— “Careful.”
The voice is low. Familiar. Cold.
Riki.
You’re about to step back when— “Take your hand off.”
The voice is quiet. But it cuts clean through the moment but Mr. Kim doesn’t move immediately.
Instead, his gaze shifts to Riki, a faint smile still playing on his lips.
“I was just—”
Riki doesn’t let him finish.
His hand comes to your waist, pulling you a fraction closer to him—subtle to outsiders, undeniable to you.
“I said,” his voice drops, quieter now, but far more dangerous,
“take. your hand. off.”
A pause.
The room suddenly feels too still.
Mr. Kim studies him for a second longer… then slowly lifts his hand away from your back, as if indulging him.
“No harm meant,” he says lightly.
But the damage is already done.
Riki’s grip on your waist tightens—not painfully, but enough to ground you… to claim you.
To remind you.
His thumb presses into your side once, controlled—yet not gentle.
Mr. Kim exhales, slipping his hands into his pockets. “I was only keeping your wife company.”
Riki tilts his head slightly, eyes unreadable.
“I don’t recall needing help.”
The air between them sharpens.
Mr. Kim lets out a quiet chuckle, taking a step back.
“Of course. My mistake.”
His gaze flickers to you one last time—this time, more careful.
“Enjoy your evening, Mrs. Y/n.”
And then he walks away. But the tension doesn’t leave.
Riki doesn’t move. His hand is still on your waist.
Your back still remembers the warmth that wasn’t his.
A few seconds pass before he finally leans in—close enough that only you can hear him.
His voice is soft. Too soft.
“Did you like it?”
A pause.
His thumb presses slightly deeper into your side.
“Or should I break his hand for touching you?”
Your lips twitch before you can stop yourself.
“...You’re funny,” you say under your breath.
It slips out lighter than the tension wrapped around you.
For a second—just a second—you think you might’ve softened it.
Riki goes still. Not relaxed. Stil.
The kind of stillness that makes your stomach drop.
Slowly, he pulls back just enough to look at you—really look at you.
There’s no smile on his face. Just something quiet… and sharp.
“Funny?” he repeats softly.
His thumb drags once against your side, slower this time—not rough, but deliberate.
“You think I’m joking.”
It’s not a question. The air between you tightens, like something unseen is pulling it taut.
Behind you, the music continues, people laugh, glasses clink— But right here, it feels like everything’s gone silent.
Riki’s gaze flickers briefly to where Mr. Kim disappeared… then back to you. And something in his expression shift.
He leans in again, closer than before—his voice barely above a whisper against your ear.
“Say that again.”
A pause. His hand tightens just slightly at your waist.
“Tell me I’m funny.”
Not loud. Not aggressive.
But there’s something in it that makes it very clear— He’s not asking for a joke anymore.
The tension hangs for a second longer—
Then you cut through it.
“Okay… let’s just go home,” you say quietly.
Before he can respond, you lean in and press a quick, soft peck to his lips.
Riki freezes.
Not like before—this isn’t that cold, dangerous stillness.
This is different. Unexpected.
His grip on your waist loosens just a fraction, like his mind is catching up to what just happened.
You pull back slightly, watching him. For a moment, he just looks at you. Unreadable.
Then his eyes drop—just for a second—to your lips.
Something shifts.
When he looks back at you, his expression is calmer… but not soft.
Controlled, again—but quieter now.
His hand moves from your waist to your lower back, guiding—not forcing, just… deciding.
“Fine.”
A pause.
Then, softer—almost under his breath—
“Stay close.”
He says as he presses a kiss to your forehead.
He leads you through the crowd, his hand never leaves you this time.
Not even for a second. And just before you reach the exit, his fingers press lightly against your back— Right where Mr. Kim’s hand had been.
Not rough. Not angry. But deliberate.
Like he’s erasing something only he noticed.
Like he remembers exactly where someone else touched— And doesn’t plan on forgetting it anytime soon.
.
for more of this....... check out : cold husband riki series
A/N: woah, finally. thats out. uhm published this only cause @leonykennedy said she missed cold husband riki series! not proofread. hahaha ily guys sm uhhhhh ye, thanksss nd stay hydratedddd.
the airport was already loud, people everywhere with suitcases rolling past, but somehow jake still made it all feel easy.
one hand pulled the suitcase behind him while the other kept your daughter tucked against his side. her little dog plushie was squished between them as she pointed excitedly out the huge windows every few seconds.
"daddy, is that ours?" adeline asked again, her little sunglasses slipping down her nose.
jake looked up at the plane she was pointing at and smiled. "not yet, princess. ours is gonna be bigger."
adeline's eyes widened straight away. "bigger?"
"way bigger." he said, nodding seriously.
she gasped and instantly hugged his neck tighter, her little legs kicking against his side from excitement. you laughed softly and reached over to fix her sunglasses back into place.
"she's been talking about brisbane all week.." you said.
jake glanced over at you with the softest smile. "so have i."
"you too?" you teased.
he leaned a little closer while the line moved forward. "a whole trip with my girls? obviously i'm excited."
your heart melted a little at that. even in the middle of all the airport noise, he somehow made everything feel warm.
once you finally got through, your daughter wriggled in his arms until he set her down by the giant window near the gate. her tiny hands pressed against the glass as she stared at all the planes outside.
"mommy, look! that one's moving!"
jake crouched beside her, one arm around her little waist so she wouldn't wander too far. "maybe ours is next."
she turned to him so fast her plushie nearly slipped from her hands. "really?"
"maybe.." he said with a grin. "guess we'll have to wait and see.."
that only made her bounce on the spot, talking about window seats, plane snacks, and how her plush dog needed to look outside too. jake listened to every single word, smiling and answering her little questions like they were the most important conversations in the world.
by the time boarding was announced, she was practically buzzing with excitement. the second she heard it, both arms went straight up.
"daddy, up!"
jake laughed and lifted her onto his hip without hesitation, her plushie tucked safely between them again. she rested her cheek against his shoulder this time, still peeking over at the planes while he rubbed her back without even thinking about it.
"always got you, princess." he whispered, kissing the top of her head.
you walked beside them toward the gate, smiling at the way she kept whispering excited little things in his ear about brisbane and how jake nodded along to every word.
and honestly, just watching the two of them like that, the trip already felt special before you'd even left the airport.