7 + 23 💐
do you think you're redeemable?
“redeemable for what?” she asks, hands busy making a pot of coffee, pouring in the grinds, which had been meticulously crushed by the spin of a manual handle on the grinder, finely done, equally poured. “redeemable for living? for doing what i need to do to survive?” gyuri flops the lid shut and presses the button, turning to lean against the counter, looking at the rest of the apartment, cleanly, orderly. all of it staring right back at her, the little things she’d collected over the years, a result of staying put in a place for too long and getting too comfortable to decorate it. make it something like a home, if it ever existed past those hazy, warm days she tries not to remember too often, if only she paints it through a lens that her longing shapes.
the coffee starts, dripping down into the glass, arms crossed over her chest. “then yeah. all i can do is push forward, and survive, and try to live my life in the best way i can. all i’ve got is what i’ve done for myself, nothing else. so yeah, redeemable, redeemable because i’m just trying to live and i deserve that. i deserve to try. nothing’s been handed to me, i’ve taken every bit of it for myself.”
she reaches for a mug with a chipped handle, some worn pattern fading with every single wash. holds it, looks over the porcelain. “if i just didn’t do anything about it, where would i be now? not here. not making a life for myself. i’ll redeem myself later, when it’s all said and done. when i can look back and say that i did something. lived my life. maybe even be happy.” gyuri laughs, shaking her head. “yeah. something like that.”
do you believe in heroism? in heroes?
“if you would’ve asked me when i was younger, yes. i believed in heroes. i believed in the people that i thought could be heroes, like my father. he was a hero to me without even trying, just— that he could go out there and volunteer himself like that, to help people. i wanted so bad to believe in heroes, to believe that he could be one. i wanted to believe in my dad.” there’s a storm raging outside, battering against the windows, orange table light and a stack of books, filled with the messy scrawl of her handwriting.
she’s got pen ink on the side of her hand from writing too long, slumped over in her chair in glasses with her hair askew. bandages on her knuckles, results of a fight gone wrong at daemon, someone not leaving as quietly as she wished they would every single time. a split lip. leans her chin on her hand, tapping the end of her pen on her cheek. “but then i don’t think he really believed in me. not me, and not my mom, because i don’t think he ever went out there to do that for us. maybe in the beginning, maybe before it all went wrong.”
“you’d think that they’d encourage people to be heroes. these aeternals— whatever, it’s not really my fucking business, but— whether it was heroes or the villains or just my father, maybe in my heart i wished he could be a hero. i wished being a hero was enough for him. i wanted my believing in him to be enough, and it wasn’t. you can want to save people all you want, but they have to want to listen.” she remembers one of the last times she saw DREAD, standing over the body of someone scrambling back towards the wall, begging for mercy, tendrils of darkness enclosing like a trap, and knew she couldn’t recognize her father anymore.
the room’s getting darker, the light barely blinking a beacon in the dark. sometimes she gets like this— sometimes it’s easier to be one with that darkness that pulls at her fingertips. “we all have to save ourselves. save each other, if we can, and maybe that’s heroism. maybe we can all just be heroes by trying. i’d like to think that’s good enough, and sometimes it is.”









