six feet under | h + b
--- @bbhx247
She had the choice to live a finer life. Her father made it very clear when he gave two black credit cards and a burner phone to Hana. Just one swipe or one call and they will make all of her wishes come true. However, she has never adapted well to that kind of lifestyle. Never has she splurged on things she will never need or use, but she does spend luxuriously just to inform him that his dirty little secret still exists. She is the same Yoo Hana who diligently does her chores even if the person who have conditioned her into something like that through relentless nags wasn't here anymore.
The state of your home reflects with what you are feeling, her late mother used to muse about it. Given the mess inside her head resembles the storm arriving to bring terror, as to what the media has been sensationalizing about and has even ensued a widespread panic among its dumb citizens, in Seoul, she keeps everything at her place in check. Controlled. Unblemished. Immaculate. This is due to the hopes the magic phrase that has embedded in her will alternate its nature.
One of Prague Tower's revered amenities was their laundry service, but Hana opted to do everything on her own just to connect with the commoner's life she grew up with. Luckily, there was still an area, although secluded, where she can pursue her errands. It was almost unknown to most of the building's residents. An amenity that was left behind to rot in dust and rust after adapting to the more modern way of city living.
As she watched the machine emitted a low grumbling hum, another person seemed to have made their presence known as they shuffled behind her. She didn't even bothered to look at the other, choosing to focus on the spinning lumps of wet fabric from the translucent round glass instead. Hana has no intentions to build a camaraderie with the other residents, unless they were deemed useful to her. That was, until, everything went black.
Her heart skipped a beat from the darkness who swallowed her whole unheralded. There was something uncomfortable with the absence of the mechanical purr, the little quirk the room has that she now adores. It was also a huge mistake to leave her phone behind her loft. The stillness of the place made it eerie for Hana, and it takes a lot of effort for her to be bothered like this. Hoping that the person she heard earlier wasn't a fixture of imagination, she attempted to reach out, stepping backwards to rest her back on the cold steel of the spinner. "Hello?" She attempted to conceal the frailty of her voice. "Is someone there?"









