requested by @aloveminsalade "Hey hey~ How are you doing, sweetie?? Sorry if I misunderstood (English isn't my first language 😖), but I saw your reply to a comment where you said you wanted to write longer stories, and I was wondering if I could request a slow-burn fluffy one-shot about Sunoo and Reader, in the style of Cindella Closet (I love that jdrama 😔 I highly recommend it!!) I love your enha dad series, but since I love your writing and have been thinking about a story like that with Sunoo, I really wanted to make this request!!"
You’ve always believed that people like you existed on the edges of rooms.
Not invisible, no, that would be easier. You were seen, just not noticed. Like background music in a café or a potted plant near the window. Present, harmless, quietly existing.
That belief follows you into adulthood.
It follows you into the cramped apartment, where the uneven lighting makes your reflection look unfamiliar. It follows you into the office where your heels click too loudly, and your blouses never seem to sit right. It follows you into mirrors, into fitting rooms, into every comparison you never asked to make.
And it definitely follows you into the elevator on a rainy Tuesday night.
You’re soaked, hair frizzed, tote bag heavy with paperwork, mascara smudged just enough to make you look like you tried and failed. The elevator doors slide shut with a tired sigh, trapping you inside with the scent of detergent and rain.
And then—
“Hey.”
You flinch.
The voice is warm. Soft. Almost… sunny.
You look up.
He’s standing in the corner, cardigan draped loosely over his shoulders, umbrella folded neatly at his feet. His hair is damp, cheeks flushed pink from the cold, eyes bright like he’s just discovered something delightful, except that something is you.
“I think,” he says carefully, “your shoelace is untied.”
You blink.
“Oh.”
You glance down. He’s right, one small, embarrassing detail in a long list of things that feel wrong today.
“Thanks,” you mumble, crouching awkwardly.
“No problem.” He smiles, then hesitates. “Um… do you want a tissue? Your mascara—”
Mortification burns hot.
You straighten too quickly. “I’m fine.”
The lie sits between you, heavy.
He doesn’t push. Just nods and offers the tissue anyway, placing it gently on the elevator railing like an olive branch.
“I’m Sunoo,” he says. “By the way.”
“…Y/N.”
The elevator hums.
The silence isn’t uncomfortable. That surprises you.
When the doors open, he holds them for you.
“Same floor?” he asks.
You nod.
And somehow, that’s how it starts.
Sunoo becomes a constant before you realize it.
He lives two floors below you. Works odd hours. Always smells faintly like fabric softener and citrus. He notices things, tiny, inconsequential things no one else ever seems to.
“You changed your part,” he says one morning in the lobby.
You freeze. “I did?”
“Yeah,” he nods. “It suits you.”
Your cheeks warm. “Oh. Thanks.”
Another day, he catches you tugging at your sleeves in the elevator.
“You don’t have to hide your hands,” he says gently. “They’re nice.”
You laugh awkwardly. “You’re weird.”
“I get that a lot,” he grins.
But he never says things that make you feel exposed. Just… seen. In a safe way.
It’s disarming.
One evening, you come home late, shoulders slumped, spirit frayed thin. You barely register him until he’s offering you a convenience store bag.
“I made too much,” he says. “Ramyeon. Want some?”
You hesitate. You always do.
But you’re tired of eating alone.
So you say yes.
That becomes a ritual too.
“You know,” Sunoo says one night, sitting cross-legged on your floor while steam curls between you, “you always look like you’re bracing for impact.”
You nearly choke.
“What?”
“Like,” he gestures vaguely, “you’re waiting for someone to tell you you’re doing everything wrong.”
You stare at your cup.
“That’s… accurate,” you admit quietly.
He hums. “Want help?”
“With what?”
“With not feeling like that.”
You laugh bitterly. “Is that something you can fix?”
“No,” he says easily. “But I can walk with you while you try.”
Something in your chest tightens.
You don’t know when you start telling him things.
About the way clothes never feel made for your body. About the promotions you don’t apply for. About the voice in your head that sounds suspiciously like every offhand comment you’ve ever received.
He listens. Really listens.
And then one day, he says, “Come with me.”
“To where?”
“Trust me.”
You should say no.
You don’t.
The shop is small. Warm. Full of mirrors that don’t feel cruel.
Sunoo drifts through racks as he belongs there, fingers brushing fabric with fond familiarity.
“You don’t have to buy anything,” he assures you. “Just try.”
“I’m bad at this,” you warn.
“That’s okay,” he says. “So was Cinderella.”
You snort. “I don’t think fairy godmothers wear cardigans.”
“Hey,” he grins, “don’t underestimate cardigans.”
He hands you pieces you would never choose yourself. Soft silhouettes. Colours that make your skin glow instead of disappear.
In the fitting room, you stare at your reflection.
You don’t look transformed.
You look… revealed.
When you step out, Sunoo’s eyes widen, not in shock, not in judgment.
In recognition.
“There you are,” he murmurs.
Your throat tightens. “There who?”
“You.”
You blink hard.
No one has ever said that to you before.
From then on, change comes gently.
Not overnight. Not magically.
But you start standing straighter.
You stop apologizing before you speak.
Sunoo never pushes. He celebrates every step like it’s monumental.
When you wear a dress to work and text him nervously, he replies instantly:
You look like yourself. And that’s more than enough.
When you cry over a bad day, he brings ice cream and lets you ramble.
When you doubt everything, he reminds you of what’s real.
Slowly, dangerously, you fall.
Not in a dramatic way.
In a quiet, terrifying, tender way.
You realize it one night, watching him laugh over something stupid, eyes crinkling, hands animated.
You love him.
And loving him makes you want to be brave.
It rains the night you tell him.
You’re on the rooftop, city lights blurred, your heart pounding louder than the storm.
“I like you,” you say. “More than a friend.”
He goes still.
For one awful second, you regret everything.
Then he steps closer.
“I was hoping you’d say that,” he admits softly. “But I didn’t want to be someone who rushes you.”
Your breath shakes. “I’m still scared.”
“That’s okay,” he says, reaching for your hand, not gripping, just offering. “We can go slow. As slow as you need.”
You lace your fingers with his.
The warmth is grounding.
“I don’t need glass slippers,” you whisper.
Sunoo smiles, eyes shining. “Good. They look painful.”
You laugh, leaning into him as the rain falls.
For the first time, you don’t feel like you’re standing on the edge of something fragile.
You feel like you’re home.
(Sunoo's POV)
Sunoo has always been good at noticing things.
The way a hemline wants to fall but doesn’t. The way colour changes under different lighting conditions. The way people shrink when they’re afraid of being too much, or worse, not enough.
That’s probably why he noticed you so quickly.
Not because you were loud, stunning, or commanding the room.
But because you kept folding yourself inward, like you were afraid the world might snap shut if you took up the space you deserved.
And God, that made something ache in him.
He tells himself he’s just being kind.
That this, walking beside you, offering suggestions, smiling encouragements, holding silence when you need it, is something he’d do for anyone.
But that’s a lie.
Because when you step into a room, Sunoo’s attention sharpens instinctively. Because he memorizes the way your confidence fluctuates day by day. Because he feels proud when you stand a little straighter and irrationally angry at anyone who makes you doubt yourself again.
Because when you smile, really smile, it feels like a reward he didn’t know he was working toward.
The second makeover happens on a quiet Sunday.
You text him first.
Are you busy?
Sunoo stares at his phone, heart doing that ridiculous little leap it always does when your name lights up his screen.
Never too busy for you, he types. Then deletes it.
I’m free. What’s up?
You hesitate before replying.
I have a presentation tomorrow. And I feel like if I wear my usual stuff, I’ll disappear.
Sunoo exhales slowly.
Come over, he writes.
Let’s not let you disappear.
He tries not to look too pleased when you arrive.
You’re wearing oversized knitwear again, sleeves pulled over your hands, hair loosely tied. Comfortable. Safe.
He knows that look now.
“You ready?” he asks gently.
You nod, but your eyes are uncertain.
Sunoo grabs his jacket. “Today’s not about changing you,” he says as you walk. “It’s about translating you.”
You blink. “That sounds… suspiciously poetic.”
He laughs. “I dabble.”
The shop he takes you to this time is brighter. Clean lines. Structured pieces. Clothes that speak quietly but confidently.
Sunoo watches you more than the racks.
You hover at the entrance, like you’re waiting for permission.
He steps closer. Lowers his voice. “I’ll be right here. Okay?”
You nod.
And you try.
Watching you in fitting rooms has become Sunoo’s quiet agony.
Not because of anything inappropriate, he’s careful, respectful, always averting his eyes when you emerge half-ready, but because of the moment after.
The moment you step out fully dressed, bracing yourself.
Waiting to be wrong.
This time, you’re wearing tailored slacks and a soft blouse tucked just enough to define your waist without screaming for attention. The colour warms your skin.
You look… capable.
You look like someone who knows what she’s doing.
Your hands twist nervously. “It’s too much, isn’t it?”
Sunoo’s chest tightens.
“No,” he says firmly. “It’s honest.”
You look up at him, startled.
“This is what you look like when you stop hiding,” he continues, voice gentle but sure. “You don’t overwhelm a room. You ground it.”
Your eyes glisten.
Sunoo looks away before he does something reckless, like reach for your face.
He tells himself again: Go slow.
After that, you start inviting him in more.
Not just to shops, but into your inner world.
You ask his opinion before buying clothes. Send him mirror selfies with captions like Is this me or am I pretending?
He always answers honestly.
It’s you on a brave day.
It’s you when you’re tired.
It’s you experimenting.
He never says better. He never says fixed.
And every time you trust him, something inside him tightens further.
Because he wants to be more than a guide.
He wants to be chosen.
The third makeover isn’t planned.
It happens in your apartment.
You’re sitting on the floor, surrounded by clothes, expression frustrated.
“I don’t know what I’m doing,” you sigh. “I like some of these pieces individually, but together I just feel… fake.”
Sunoo crouches beside you.
“Can I try something?” he asks.
You nod.
He doesn’t touch you. Not yet.
He rearranges outfits on the bed. Pair old favourites with new pieces. Suggests rolling sleeves, changing shoes, and adding structure instead of hiding.
“Try this,” he says.
You disappear into the bedroom.
Sunoo waits, heart in his throat.
When you step out, his breath catches before he can stop it.
You look like yourself.
Not dressed up. Not transformed.
Just… aligned.
You glance at him nervously. “Well?”
Sunoo swallows.
“You know,” he says carefully, “the hardest part about style isn’t knowing what looks good.”
“What is it?”
“Believing you’re allowed to look like you matter.”
Your lips part slightly.
The silence stretches.
Sunoo feels dangerously close to crossing a line, but then you smile.
Soft. Real.
“Thank you,” you whisper.
He nods because if he speaks, he might say too much.
The pining becomes unbearable after that.
Because now you laugh more freely around him. Sit closer. Lean into his space without realizing it.
Because you look at him like he’s safe.
Because he is.
And because safety feels terrifyingly close to love.
Sunoo lies awake at night, replaying moments.
The way you absentmindedly fix his collar.
The way you call his name when you’re unsure.
The way your confidence blooms in small, radiant ways.
He wants to tell you that helping you discover yourself has only made him fall harder.
But he’s afraid.
Afraid that loving you too loudly might undo all the quiet strength you’ve built.
So he waits.
The day of your presentation, he waits by his phone like it’s a lifeline.
When your message finally comes, it’s short.
It went well.
Then another.
I didn’t hide.
Sunoo exhales, chest light.
I knew you wouldn’t, he replies.
You send a picture, just your reflection in an elevator mirror. Calm. Steady. Confident.
Sunoo stares at it for a long time.
You don’t look like someone trying to be seen.
You look like someone who knows she deserves to be.
And that’s when he realizes something terrifying.
He didn’t fall for you because you needed him.
He fell for you because you grew.
That night, you come over.
You sit beside him on the couch, knees brushing.
“I think,” you say slowly, “I’m starting to like who I am.”
“And I think,” you continue, voice softer, “you’re part of why.”
His heart stutters.
He turns to you fully now.
“I need to tell you something,” he says quietly. “But only if you’re ready to hear it.”
You meet his gaze. Steady. Brave.
“I am.”
Sunoo takes a breath.
And finally, finally, lets himself step forward.
(Sunoo POV)
Sunoo doesn’t ask you out the way people do in movies.
There’s no dramatic confession, no fireworks, no sudden, overwhelming declaration that forces you to respond before you’ve had time to breathe.
Instead, he says—
“Do you want to try… us?”
Quietly. Carefully. Like he’s placing something fragile between his palms.
You blink at him on the couch, knees still brushing, the city humming softly outside the window.
“Try?” you repeat.
He nods, lips curved into a nervous smile. “No pressure. No expectations. Just… spending time together. On purpose.”
You consider him for a moment. He doesn’t rush you. He never does.
“I’d like that,” you say finally. “I think.”
The relief that floods him is almost dizzying.
“Yeah?” he asks, softer now.
You smile. “Yeah.”
And just like that, you’re dating.
Dating you feels different from what he expected.
There’s no sudden shift. No dramatic line crossed.
It’s just… more intentional versions of what you already were.
You text him good morning now.
Sometimes with selfies. Sometimes just a simple I’m awake.
Sunoo saves everyone.
You start walking together more, side by side, steps unconsciously syncing. Occasionally, your hands brush. Sometimes they don’t.
He lets you set the pace.
Because loving you quietly feels like the right thing to do.
Your first date isn’t labelled as one.
You say, “Do you want to come with me to the bookstore?”
And he says yes like it’s the easiest decision he’s ever made.
You slowly wander through aisles, fingers trailing over spines. You show him books you love but never talk about. He watches the way your face softens when you read the blurbs.
“You look really happy,” he says.
You glance at him, surprised. “I do?”
“Yeah,” he smiles. “Like you’re not worried about being watched.”
You hum thoughtfully. “Maybe it’s because I’m not.”
That makes something warm settle deep in his chest.
At the café, after, you sit across from him, feet tucked under the chair, sleeves rolled up. You don’t hide your hands anymore.
Sunoo notices everything.
He falls for you again every time you let yourself exist without apology.
When you talk about your day without minimizing it.
When you choose clothes because you like them, not because they're going to disappear.
When you laugh without checking the room first.
Sometimes, he worries.
Not that you’ll leave, but that you’ll think he loves you because you changed.
So one evening, as you sit on the floor sorting laundry, he says—
“I hope you know something.”
You glance up. “What?”
“I didn’t help you become someone else,” he says carefully. “I just… reminded you of who you already were.”
Your eyes soften.
“I know,” you say. “But thank you for staying long enough for me to see it.”
He looks away, pretending to focus on folding, because his chest feels too full.
Your first kiss happens accidentally.
At least, it feels that way.
You’re watching something dumb on his couch, shoulder pressed to his. You laugh, then yawn, then rest your head against him without thinking.
Sunoo freezes internally.
He doesn’t move. Doesn’t breathe too loudly. Doesn’t want to scare you.
Minutes pass.
Your fingers curl lightly into the fabric of his sleeve.
And then you tilt your head up.
“Can I…?” you ask quietly.
He nods immediately. “Yes.”
The kiss is soft. Hesitant. Barely there.
Like testing warm water with your toes.
Sunoo’s hand lifts, pauses, then rests gently at your waist, only when you lean closer.
The kiss doesn’t linger.
But it stays with him all night.
After that, affection becomes something shared, not assumed.
You sit closer. Lean into him more often. Sometimes you hold hands. Sometimes you don’t.
Sunoo never takes more than you offer.
He learns your tells.
The way you fiddle with rings when you’re overwhelmed.
The way you seek his sleeve when you need grounding.
The way your voice softens when you feel safe.
He loves you most in those moments.
Quiet ones. Unremarkable ones.
The ones no one else sees.
One evening, you try on an outfit you’ve put together yourself.
You step out of your room, nervous but proud.
“Well?” you ask.
Sunoo looks at you, and this time, he doesn’t see doubt waiting to be soothed.
He sees confidence asking to be witnessed.
“You look like someone who knows where she’s going,” he says.
You smile, glowing. “Even if I don’t?”
“Especially then.”
You step closer. Hug him. Fully. Without hesitation.
Sunoo closes his eyes, resting his chin lightly against your head.
He thinks, This is enough.
He doesn’t say I love you right away.
Not because he doesn’t feel it.
But because love, to him, is something you build, not declare.
So he shows it instead.
By walking you home when it’s late.
By remembering your coffee order.
By sitting with you when your confidence wavers again.
By loving you when you’re quiet, uncertain, tired.
And one night, when you curl against him and murmur—
⭑.ᐟ ────── late night fall night w Sunoo, 0.2k words, skinship, kissing, toothrotting fluff, f!reader, idol au!, establish relationship, proofread but still may have mistakes.
Fall had finally arrived, which meant walking in the cold air surrounding the Han river just after 9pm with SUNOO. It was a date of sorts. His practise had run later than intended, make something out of it as meetings between the two of you were scarce due to his tightly packed schedule.
You hoped you wouldn’t freeze as you were bundled up as best you could, scarf wrapped tightly around your neck, hands scraping for warmth inside the pockets of your jacket. Sunoo dressed the same except with the addition of gloves. The neon glow of the bustling city illuminated the two of you as you walked side by side, arms looped, cars filling the comfortable silence. You enjoyed the simplistic “dates” like these, late at night, without the fear of being hounded by saesangs.
“Next time we should just meet up at a cafe, somewhere warm, my hands are about to fall off.”
You complain, shivering.
He rolled his eyes,
“I told you to bring gloves but no!”
Scolding but his actions said otherwise, hands gently pulling yours from the confinements of your pocket. Encasing them with his as he began rubbing them together as a way to make heat from the friction, hands warming by the second.
He uncased your hands deeming them warm enough, letting them go limp by your sides, intertwining your fingers, he brought your hand to his mouth to place the most delicate of kisses upon his favourite spot. His lips tickled the skin, face now heated despite the cold. Both of you feeling warmer than before.
⭑.ᐟ ────── authors note: thanks for reading! jungwon drabble out soon, reblogs & likes r appreciated. requests are open!
GENRE: contemporary romance, idol au, slice of life, drama, fluff, skinship, teasing, forbidden love, first meetings, strangers to lovers.
SYNOPSIS: You met Kim Sunoo once at Terminal Two. Not in the way love stories usually begin, but in the way real ones do — rushed, accidental, yet unforgettable. He was just another boy lost in the blur of arrival boards and security lines.
Until he wasn’t.
It was the panic in his eyes, the mask half-hiding a face the world recognised — pulling him into a quiet corner, away from the crowd, the chaos, and the cameras. That day, he wasn’t an idol — he was just someone trying to disappear into the crowd. You helped him without a word — no names exchanged, just a quiet kindness.
Years passed. Life moved on. But Seoul brought him back to you — not under departures this time, but beneath the hum of a convenience store light, looking at you like he remembered.
And though neither of you boarded that flight together, something stayed suspended in that sacred stillness of the terminal.
Fate has drawn you back to the same place. Maybe this time, he won’t disappear.
⊹ enha4everr’s note ⊹ so i read somewhere that sunoo is the most mature member, so i wanted to bring a piece that can reflect a different side of our ddeonu <3 sorry y’all the synopsis is so long :( also - desire:unleash is so good!! my favourites are helium and too close :)
just a reminder that this piece of writing is from my imagination and does not represent the names mentioned.
Summary: You’ve heard the rumours about Kim Sunoo — a child of Aphrodite whose beauty could bend anyone’s will. But he hates the stereotype, hiding his divine heritage behind carefully chosen company. Then, wandering the university halls, he sees you — leading the Textiles for Youths club with quiet grace. You, a descendant of Arachne, have spent your life concealing your talent, hoping to erase your bloodline’s curse. Enrolled in textile design, you keep a low profile—until you meet Sunoo, whose circle of demi-god friends now prepares for the upcoming fashion festival, pulling you into a world you’ve tried to avoid.
w/c: approx 20k or more i forgot - this one's a doozy!
a/n: Born to love, forced to be enemies - i know that it was athena x arachne beef, but that doesn’t mean aphrodite is no stranger to jealousy and indifference to people commenting about beauty in people other than just the goddess herself. But this fic will mostly revolve around y/n and her past that was subjected to torment just because of her distant connection with lesser known myths.. I wanted to write a fic where sometimes, we as individuals are more than just the name itself. Again, all the characters and ideas are fictional etc. Masterlist here!
Tags: Modern greek mythology au! University au! There’s slight notes of magical abilities. Ni-ki = nike (goddess of victory), heeseung = the muses (music), Jay = metis (mother of athena), sunoo = aphrodite (ni-ki knows about his secret), jungwon = the fates (balance, choosing his path for fate), jake = asclepius (healing), sunghoon = boreas (god of ice) Mentions of &team jo - he’s a forest nymph, heejin (descendant of Nyx), haseul and other characters are all fictional.
You’ve always been told that Kim Sunoo is blessed with beauty — not just in his looks, but in the way his gaze lingers, like it holds some kind of divine pull. They say anyone who catches the eyes of Aphrodite’s children becomes overwhelmed, compelled to do their bidding, trapped in a haze of beauty and grace.
You weren’t sure of what Kim Sunoo’s personality may hold, so you on the other hand are no stranger to the weight of a divine reputation. You’re a descendant of Arachne, and your family has always warned you not to flaunt your talent — no matter how badly you crave recognition. Enrolling in textile design at the local university felt like the safest path, especially when you founded a club devoted to working with youth in the industry.
In truth, you’re secretly hoping to chip away at the karmic debt your ancestor left behind. But with the gods of Olympus residing nearby — their children walking the same campus halls — you’ve had to keep your cover airtight.
You were bustling with errands—possibly even speedrunning them—after the principal of the university piled yet another task on your plate: a “welcoming banner” for the visiting high school students and their parents. Their tour was scheduled for 6 p.m. Today. Right now? It was barely past your morning class, and you were already out of breath. Panting, you fired off a quick message to your two club members who were still on campus, summoning them to the textile room for an emergency banner-making session. On the way, you raided the faculty office for extra paint and brushes before sprinting across campus.
When you finally pushed open the door to the textile club room, you spotted Jo and Heejin lounging on the sofas, chatting idly about their earlier classes. You practically dropped the bags of paint and materials at your feet with a thud.
“Jo! Heejin!” you called out, your voice carrying a little louder than intended. Both heads turned toward you, startled.
Jo’s soft voice started first, tentative. “Oh… Y/N? Would you like some h—”
But Heejin cut him off with her signature theatricality. “Oh Y/N! We were just talking about the message you sent to the group chat forty-five minutes ago. What’s up, girl?”
Still catching your breath, you leaned against the doorframe, unlocked your phone, and tossed it toward the dark haired girl.
“Here,” you sighed. “The principal just told us we have a couple of hours before a high school from a neighboring city comes by for their tour. They specifically requested to visit the fashion department—especially the Textiles for Youth club. So… we need to get this banner done. Fast.”
Heejin’s eyes widened as she skimmed the long email, her theatrical expression slipping. She glanced at Jo, who stifled a nervous cough.
“So… where do we start?” she asked, uncertain for once.
“I don’t know, Hee,” you said, pushing off the door and striding to the tables where bolts of fabric were scattered. “But we start now.”
Jo squeaked as you cleared a workspace in three quick motions, gesturing for them to join you. Dutifully, he began unpacking the paints and brushes from your bags while Heejin reluctantly peeled herself off the sofa, muttering under her breath.
The three of you slipped into rhythm—fabric spread out, brushes dipped, the first strokes of lettering traced across the banner. The air filled with the scent of paint and the low hum of Jo’s absentminded tune.
A few hours pass, and paint fumes danced around the textile room; the vinyl banner lay sprawled across the tables like a sleeping giant: WELCOME FUTURE MAKERS in bubble letters, half-filled with ombré lilac. You were bent over the “FUTURE,” coaxing a gradient out of a stubborn brush, when Heejin sighed the kind of sigh that invited an audience.
“It’s always the same,” she murmured, voice drifting like shadow. “They look at him and fall into a dream. Poor things. And Sunoo doesn’t even have to try. The descent is… inevitable.”
Jo’s head popped up from where he was threading tassels. “Descent?” he echoed, pushing his round glasses up his nose. His pupils were large, woodland-wide, the kind that caught light and kept it. “Into what?”
“Bad decisions,” Heejin said, delighting in the words. “Skipping class. Confessing secrets. Switching majors. I heard a second-year broke his scholarship contract after one study session. One look and—” She flicked her wrist. “Gone. Aphroditic aura. Classic.”
You set your brush down with a clack. “Or,” you said, leveling a stare at her, “people do dramatic things and blame the nearest myth for it.”
Heejin’s smile was small and night-soft. “I am a descendant of Nyx. I know how shadows lengthen when the moon rises.”
“And I’m the one who will be apologizing to the principal if this banner is still wet when the tour arrives in—” you check your phone, “four hours and fifty-eight minutes.”
Jo winced, torn between peacekeeping and paint. “Heejin, maybe we lay down the—uh—morals of certain individuals’ debate until after the second coat?”
Heejin twirled a strand of ink-black hair. “I’m just saying, we should warn the parents. ‘This corridor contains an entity known for glamour and destruction at your own risk. Please hold your children’s hands.’”
You snorted. “Kim Sunoo isn’t a corridor hazard.” The brush found your fingers again, and the gradient deepened to dusk along the ‘S’. “He’s a person.”
“A very beautiful person,” Jo offered, diplomatic.
Heejin arched a brow at you. “Aphrodite’s children don’t do ‘just beautiful.’ They tilt gravity.”
You met her gaze, steady. “Gravity doesn’t make the choice for you. People do.” You smoothed an errant streak with a practiced thumb. “Rather than talking about what Sunoo may or may not do, why don’t we finish this banner so it’s dry by the time I lead the tour in here… in roughly five hours, Heejin?”
Jo made a tiny squeak of relief. “I’ll speed-plait the corner tassels.”
Heejin pressed her lips together, then—infuriatingly—smiled like someone who had been expecting your line and was pleased you delivered it. “As you wish, fearless leader.”
“Textiles for Youth’s Club Leader,” you corrected automatically. “Not fearless, just organized.”
For the next half an hour, the room settled into the blessed choreography of getting things done. Jo hummed something that reminded you of the forests and old as rain while he braided cords and strung them with little wooden beads. Heejin lettered with the scientific care of someone painting prophecy onto a temple pillar. You worked the center spreads and edges, coaxing the banner into a sheen that looked like silk despite the budget paper.
But rumors had snuck into your veins, the way solvent sometimes does: a light rhythm under the skin. It wasn’t the first time you’d heard things about Sunoo. In your experience, nothing drew story like someone refusing to play the role written for them. Sunoo avoided the obvious—a perfectly tailored armor of indifference to the pedestal people built for him. It made them curious. It made them cruel, even.
You tried to scrub the thought away with color. The E brightened. The U came to life.
A polite knock rap-tapped on the open door.
“Hi,” said a voice that made Jo fumble a bead and Heejin pause mid-stroke.
A bright face, with beautiful platinum blonde mop for hair—Kim Sunoo, leaned against the frame like it was styled to match him. He wasn’t luminous—not in the cheap way of gleam and glitter. He was… considered. Light found its favorite angles and stayed longer than necessary. His eyes met yours, and there it was—that pull people described and got wrong. Not compulsion. Attention. As if everything he wasn’t saying sharpened the air between you, and you could hear your own name better inside it.
And deep down, you knew yourself that Sunoo had a way with his appearance and you chose to strengthen your resolve to not be swayed despite how the rumours may be.
“Sorry,” he said, dipping his head. “I overheard you were painting the club banner from the faculty’s office with professor Anderson, and I had some extra gold leaf from the set design studio. Thought it might help the edges pop.” He lifted a small packet. It caught a line of sun and gilded his knuckles.
Heejin’s brush didn’t move. “Gold leaf,” she repeated, flat.
“Hi,” Jo said, too brightly. “We love edges!”
You coughed once—thanks, lungs—for time. “That’s… actually useful. Thank you.” You stepped closer, careful to plant your feet like roots. “We’re on a drying clock, though.”
“It sticks on fast,” the boy said. His eyes flicked to the banner, then back to you. “May I?”
Heejin’s smirk sharpened, but you didn’t look at her. “Sure. Small test strip on the bottom.”
He crossed the room with relatively no hesitation. Up close, your breath thought about hitching and you told it absolutely not. He knelt, as polite as his knock, and applied a whisper of adhesive and foil. When he peeled the backing, the lilac and gold kissed like old friends.
“That’s good,” Jo said, awed. “Like dawn on lavender.”
The blonde boy smiled. It didn’t blaze. It warmed. He offered you the brush, and the moment his fingers grazed yours, you felt it: the tug that wasn’t tugging. As if you stood at the lip of a lake on the hottest day of summer and the water said, Come in, I’ll hold you.
You inhaled paint and soap and something clean like fresh cotton. Then you spoke, because speeches were your life vest. “Thanks for the help. We have a tour in less than two hours.”
“One and a half,” Heejin murmured.
“Even better,” you said, dry.
The boy’s mouth tilted. “Then I’ll be quick. I have—” his gaze flicked to Heejin, and some quiet understanding passed between history and myth, “—plans soon anyway.”
He stayed twenty minutes. Long enough to feather the edges, short enough to contradict Heejin’s theater of doom. He didn’t perform charm; he performed care. A careful, meticulous, this-matters kind of help that had nothing to do with glamour and everything to do with being raised to respect craft. You hated that it impressed you. You hated that you didn’t hate it.
When he left, Heejin released her breath in a slow, theatrical exhale. “See?” she said lightly. “Mind you, Y/N. Kim Sunoo can do anything including — tilting the gravity like I said, earlier.”
“Technique,” you corrected, though your voice came out softer than you intended. You stared at the gold leaf catching the light like a secret. “And manners.”
Jo, who had recovered his bead, said, “He has very excellent… placement.”
Heejin dipped her brush, eyes on you. “You don’t have to prove anything by resisting. That’s a type of orbit, too.”
“I’m not orbiting anyone.” You turned to the drying racks and lifted the edge of the banner with practiced gentleness. The foil didn’t wrinkle; it settled. “We’re hanging this in twenty minutes. Jo, can you prep the tassels? Heejin, can you wipe the squeegees? I’ll set the station for the kids’ fabric stamps.”
Heejin slid you a look that said, I see you seeing, but she obeyed. “As you decree, fearless leader.”
The room spun back into motion. You laid out the stamp blocks—flowers, constellations, tiny looms—then arranged bowls of fabric-safe ink. The clock ticked forward a forgiving inch. Somewhere down the hall, a chorus line rehearsed a harmony that drifted into your room on the spine of a gust; the melody threaded through the banner, the tools, and your heart beating against your ribs.
When the final tassel was knotted and the banner hung—gleaming, lilac-and-gold like twilight promising good weather—you stood back with Jo and Heejin. For a moment the three of you were a trio: Night, Grove, Loom.
“Looks… really good,” Jo said, calmly.
Heejin’s smile was more moon than smirk. “It does.”
You let yourself have a second of pride, small and private as a folded note.
Outside, footsteps approached. Voices. The tour.
You smoothed your shirt and moved to the door, switching on your face for parents and the curious teenagers who would try not to look too interested while wanting everything. The banner caught their eyes and—okay—tilted gravity a little.
“Welcome,” you said, brightness without apology. “I’m Y/N, and this is the Textiles for Youth club. We make—well, you’ll see. Come in, please.”
As they filtered past, you felt the brush of a familiar presence at the back of the group. Your skin recognized the lake before your eyes did.
Kim Sunoo, still smelling faintly of clean cotton and stage dust, caught your gaze and did not hold it too long. He didn’t need to. He nodded like co-conspirators do when they’ve chosen the same side of a rumor.
You lifted your chin in answer and turned to the room, to the children, to the table where art waited.
Gravity could tilt. You would choose.
The tour wound through the textile room like a gentle river, the parents and children moving from station to station with Jo’s warm enthusiasm and Heejin’s measured explanations guiding them along.
Jo pointed out the fabric stamps and let a little boy press a star into cotton, grinning as though the cosmos had just been stitched into existence. Heejin spoke about fiber origins with the kind of precision that made adults nod approvingly while their children dipped fingers into bowls of ink. And you—ever the bridge—kept the flow steady, answering questions about partnerships with local schools, how students could donate fabric scraps, and the upcoming showcase where community kids would model their own creations.
The banner, still shimmering at the front of the room, caught eyes and softened skepticism. You caught a few parents smiling in quiet surprise, the kind of smile that said, 'Maybe my child belongs here.'
When the group drifted onward to the ceramics studio, one mother lingered with her daughter at her side. The girl’s posture was hesitant, chin tucked, shoulders pulled inward like a curtain half-drawn.The mother approached you slowly, words caught behind her teeth before finally breaking free.
“My daughter… she’s interested. But—” Her voice dipped low. “She’s afraid. People can be cruel about lineage. Especially when it’s… obscure.”
The girl didn’t lift her gaze, only tightened her grip on her mother’s sleeve. And in that instant, something inside you ached—sharp, old, familiar.
You remembered the whispers about webs and curses, the shudder that passed through classmates when they heard “Arachne,” as though arrogance could skip generations. You remembered silencing your own hands when they wanted to weave too much, too well. Shame disguised as caution.
Your chest tightened, but you refused to let it show. Instead, you reached out and gently clasped the mother’s hand, steady and warm.
“With what may come along,” you said, your voice carrying both promise and scar, “there will always be a lookout for those who’ve felt discrimination. Don’t worry. I’ll be the one to oversee the club and anything outside of it. If your child needs to come to someone… I’ll be there to guide them.”
The mother’s shoulders eased, breath spilling out like she’d been holding it for years. “Thank you,” she whispered, squeezing your hand before turning back to her daughter. The girl glanced up—just for a flicker—and in her eyes, you saw recognition. Not gratitude, not yet, but the fragile beginning of trust.
They caught up to the tour, leaving you alone with your thoughts. For a moment, guilt twisted like a thread too tightly pulled. You wondered if you could ever truly protect them from the things you couldn’t shield yourself from. But the child’s brief glance stayed with you, a reminder: maybe it was enough to try.
“Heading out!” Jo chirped, breaking through your daydream. He slung his backpack over his shoulder, tassels still dangling from his fingers like he couldn’t quite stop braiding.
Heejin gave you a sly half-smile, the kind that knew when you were brooding even if she wouldn’t call it out. “Assignments wait for no one. Don’t stay too long in the loom of your thoughts.”
You waved them off with practiced brightness. “Go. I’ll lock up.”
When the door clicked shut behind them, the silence that followed wasn’t heavy. It was… spacious. You began cleaning, stacking brushes, wiping down tables, setting the room back to rights. The banner hung above it all like a completed prayer.
Without thinking, you hummed—a tune older than language, older than shame. An old folk song in ancient Latin, half-remembered from your grandmother’s weaving hours. The sound threaded through the empty room like a loom shuttle, weaving you back into yourself.
And for a moment, you didn’t feel like the descendant of a mistake or a warning. You felt like a maker.
The room gave itself back to you in small obediences: brushes rinsed and fanned like wet feathers, ink bowls nested by hue, stamp blocks faced forward so their little constellations smiled for the next set of hands. Quiet settled into the corners. Your humming found the grain of it.
The song began as it always did—under your breath, vowel-soft, the shape of Latin without the pressure of translation. Your grandmother’s half-remembered hymn to thread and fate and hands that learn. You didn’t mean to lean into it. But the room did. The room always did.
You reached for the runaway thread of yarn on the stool.
“Come here,” you murmured, more to the memory than the fiber.
Your note elongated, and the stool answered. Its spindle legs creaked once as if remembering a dance, while the yarn unspooled in a sigh, spiraling up and around your fingers, then cinching itself into a taut warp along the seat. The crossbars slicked smooth like polished reeds. The top slats slid, clicked, found itself a new shape. By the time your breath lifted to the next phrase, the stool was no longer a stool. It had become a miniature loom: compact, sturdy, inevitable.
You stood very still. The song threaded through your ribs again, and the warp sang back, a faint vibrating line you felt more than heard. You’d promised yourself not to do this at school—no magic, not even the small kind—because secrecy had calcified into safety for so long that it felt like the same thing. But the mother’s eyes. The girl’s chin. Heejin’s half-moon smile that knew too much. Something in you had loosened.
“All right,” you said, as much to your fear as to the loom. “Just a little.”
You hooked a shuttle through the warp. The weft obeyed your melody. With each held note, threads flowed from unattended baskets, soft as river-water, choosing their own place along the pattern’s path. Indigo from the dye class you smuggled a few months ago; cream salvaged from a frayed sweater a student refused to throw away; a thin glimmer of metallic thread from the banner’s leftover gold leaf clinging like sunrise.
Your voice deepened. The pattern shifted. You weren’t weaving cloth so much as memory: the stubborn tenderness of learning to tie a surgeon’s knot with tiny fingers; the humiliation of having your hands praised and your lineage punished in the same sentence; the slow, stubborn claim you made over your own gift—mine, not a warning. With each phrase, the weft took shape into a narrow ribbon, complex as lace and steady as a heartbeat.
Your song told what you would never say out loud: a girl who threaded shame into silence until the silence became a cocoon; a grandmother who hummed a path through it; a loom built out of kitchen chairs and love; a lineage that wasn’t a curse but a capacity. The Latin thinned to a hum again, grief turned to grit turned to grace.
When you lifted the shuttle for the last pass, a small embroidered motif resolved itself near the end—three stars arranged not quite evenly, a constellation you had drawn in your notebooks since you were little. You touched each one with your thumb to set the thread. The bookmark was done. You tied it off and let the loom stool breathe back into itself, the warp loosening, the slats shivering into their honest shape. There would be no trace left for anyone who didn’t already know where to look.
You stood, back cracking pleasantly, arms stretching until your shoulder blades clicked into place. The song ebbed. Silence pulled in around your ankles like a tide.
A small, unguarded sound came from the doorway.
You turned.
Sunoo stood just inside the room, half in shadow, as if the hall hadn’t decided whether to keep him. His eyes were bright in a way you recognized from your own—when feeling arrives faster than your body remembers how to hold it. Tears glimmered at his lower lashes, not dramatic, not staged, just human and inconvenient and true.
“I—” he started, then pressed his lips together, like he had to tin one moment to pour it into the next. He swallowed, lifted a hand, let it drop. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to… interrupt. The stage manager needed the staple gun back and I thought I’d left it here. I heard you singing.”
Your mouth tried to make a joke. Your chest wouldn’t let it.
“How much did you hear?” you asked, voice gentler than you felt.
He glanced at the transformed-then-untransformed stool and the careful neatness of the room. His gaze drifted to your hands, then back to your face, as if he understood that everything important happened in the distance between those two points.
“Enough,” he said, and it wasn’t coy. It was secret admiration. “Enough to know it was a sad story that didn’t stay sad.”
The heat that rose to your face wasn’t embarrassment, exactly. It was a kind of exposure you hadn’t prepared for. You didn’t reach for the bookmark, even though every impulse wanted to pocket it. Instead, you laid it on the table between you, a small field of thread and intention.
“Thank you for the gold leaf,” you said quietly, because gratitude was a rope you could hold.
He gave a small breath of a laugh. “I should be thanking you. The banner. The tour. The… song.” He hesitated. “My mother used to say that some stories are sewn into you; you can’t help but hum them when you think you’re just cleaning up.”
“A wise mother.”
“She is,” he corrected, present tense. His smile flickered. “She taught me to be careful with gifts that look like temptations to other people.”
The air between you steadied. You realized why the tears in his eyes had made your own chest ache: not because they were proof your magic had been seen, but because they were an answer to it. He had been seen, too, in the most incorrect ways possible, for so long that recognition had become a rare mineral.
“It wasn’t glamour,” you said, surprising yourself with how raw the words came out. “It never is.”
“I know,” he said, and you believed him. “But I also know the gravity thing is real.”
You raised an eyebrow.
“Not mine,” he added, sheepish. “Yours. When you started singing, everything in the room fell toward the thread.”
You almost laughed. “That’s just focus.”
“Then it’s a beautiful kind of focus.” He pointed at the bookmark, careful not to touch. “May I?”
You nodded. He picked it up like a sacred relic. His fingers hovered over the constellation at the end, not quite daring to trace it. When he spoke again, his voice had gone low, stripped of performance.
“When I was thirteen, an aunt told me I’d ruin people accidentally if I didn’t learn to dull myself.” He smiled without humor. “I spent years practicing dull.”
“That sounds… exhausting.”
“It was. It is.” He met your gaze, unflinching. “Listening to you, I thought: what if gifts were allowed to be used without apology? What if ‘careful’ didn’t mean ‘smaller’?”
You let out a breath you hadn’t noticed you were holding, the same way the mother had earlier. The room felt wide again.
“Then maybe we’re both done apologizing,” you said. “At least in here.”
“In here,” he agreed, and set the bookmark down with quiet ceremony. “Would you—” He paused, recalibrated. “Would you teach me the song sometime? Not to sing it—trust me, you don’t want that—but to… understand its pattern.”
The answer was yes before the question finished. Still, you let it sit for a heartbeat, because something sacred had been shared and you wanted to honor the pacing.
“Yes,” you said. “But fair trade. You’ll show me how you did that feathering with the gold leaf like you were gilding dawn.”
His mouth tipped into a real smile then, the kind that didn’t tilt gravity so much as set it right. “Deal.”
A beat. The building’s bones creaked as someone in the next room stacked chairs. Somewhere down the hall, a harmony rose again, the chorus line testing a different key.
Sunoo looked as if he might say something else, then thought better of it. He picked up the staple gun from the counter with a small, guilty wince. “Caught.”
“Borrowed,” you corrected.
“Borrowed,” he echoed. At the threshold, he turned, more open than he had been at the start. “Your club is lucky.”
“Textiles for Youth,” you said automatically, then softer: “We’re trying to make a place you don’t have to dull yourself to fit.”
He nodded once—co-conspirator acknowledgment, rumor-breaking pact. “See you tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow,” you said.
When he left, you looked down at the bookmark. The three uneven stars held their shape like a promise. You slipped it into the pocket of your apron instead of hiding it away, then finished tidying the room that had watched you choose.
The lights dimmed to a practical twilight. The banner breathed on the wall.
From somewhere you couldn’t name—memory, lineage, possibility—you felt a thread tug back.
The next day arrived quicker than your body agreed with. Your alarm beeped like a frantic woodpecker until your hand fumbled for the clock, pried the back open, and ripped the batteries out with sleepy vengeance. You dragged it under the covers like spoils of war, tucked against your chest as if that would buy you five more minutes.
But your brain had other plans—dreams loosening, light poking at the corners of your eyelids, breath turning shallow in the way that meant awake.
You groaned into the pillow before surrendering, rolling onto your right side. Your gaze found the nightstand. Empty, except for your phone blinking fully charged like it had been smugly waiting for you.
A glance at the screen said: 11:03 AM.
Which meant: three hours until the principal’s meeting with the fashion department. Three hours until you’d need to defend budgets, schedules, and why a textile showcase deserved prime space during the school festival.
Your stomach fluttered, nerves and pride coiling like twin threads. You stretched, yawned, and shuffled out of bed. The routine carried you forward: brushing teeth to the hum of the shower pipes, pulling a pressed shirt over yesterday’s leggings, tying your hair back with the same fabric tie you’d sewn last semester. You slung your satchel across your shoulder, heavy with sketchbooks, the embroidered bookmark tucked between their pages.
By the time you stepped outside, the air was already buzzing with late morning traffic, heat rising from the pavement. You joined the slow parade of commuters until the downtown shuttle pulled up, its brakes sighing like an overworked dragon.
Inside smelled faintly of vinyl seats and someone’s half-finished latte. You scanned for a spot, eyes glancing past students clustered in twos and threes—and froze.
Near the window, earbuds in, sat Kim Sunoo. His profile was all considered lines, framed by the light that filtered through the glass. He bobbed his head slightly, either to music or to thought, gaze fixed somewhere outside where the city blurred.
For a second you hovered in the aisle, torn. Say hi? He looks… focused. What if he doesn’t want to talk? The last thing you wanted was to intrude.
So you slid into the seat directly in front of him, pulling your headphones from your bag, the universal signal for I’ll stay in my lane.
“—Oh! Y/N!”
His voice caught you mid-motion, warm enough to disarm. You turned, startled, to see him smiling, tugging one earbud out.
“I didn’t know you took this shuttle at this time,” he said, leaning forward slightly so his words didn’t have to compete with the engine’s grumble.
The way he said it—pleasantly surprised, like he’d found something rare he hadn’t been looking for—made your carefully planned retreat unravel at the seams.
You smile despite yourself. “Caught me,” you say, twisting in your seat to face him over the headrest. “I’m usually earlier, but my alarm and I had a disagreement.”
“The kind where the alarm loses?” Sunoo grins, tucking the loose earbud into his collar. “A just war.”
“Absolutely righteous,” you say solemnly. “I’ve got a meeting with the principal at two about the festival. Trying to make sure Textiles for Youth gets enough space and outlets that don’t spontaneously die of combustion or some sorts.”
“Outlets that behave,” he echoes. “A noble cause.” He shifts, turning a little sideways in his seat so you can see each other without craning. “I’m heading in to help a friend—Ni-Ki. He’s working on some fashion plans for the festival and asked if I could… I don’t know… be an extra pair of eyes?”
“Ni-Ki,” you repeat, testing the name against the mental map of faces you’ve seen orbiting the theatre wing. “As in… Victory Ni-Ki?”
Sunoo’s mouth tips. “Descendant of Nike. He hates when people make shoe jokes.”
“I will not,” you promise, deadpan. “I will only make tasteful winged-sandal references under my breath.”
He huffs a laugh. “He’d respect the mythology, at least.” The bus lurches into motion; sunlight stutters across his cheekbone in bands. “He’s brilliant with movement—of course he is—but he’s trying to translate that into garments that read ‘win’ without looking like trophies. He asked me because I’m ‘good at seeing,’ his words, but I keep telling him I’m not a designer.”
You tilt your head. “You are good at seeing. That’s half the job.”
“Maybe,” he concedes, then shrugs. “I still don’t know how to help him today. He sent me a sketch with three silhouettes and a note that just said: ‘MAKE IT SAY FINISH LINE BUT NOT LITERAL.’”
You snort. “Ah yes, the classic brief.”
He watches you, hopeful sliding in under the casual. “What about you? Besides singlehandedly negotiating with the principal.”
“Ha. I brought mockups for community workshops and a cost breakdown that will make an accountant weep with joy. If I can prove we’ll pull crowds and undercut rental costs, I might get us the atrium strip by the big windows.”
“The light there is perfect,” he says immediately, like he’s already picturing your banner in it. Something warm threads through your chest.
You tap your bag. “I also have a prop—an embroidered… morale booster.”
“Now I’m curious.” He leans forward, then stops himself, like he’s learned not to pry. “Only if you want to show me later.”
“Later,” you say, and the word sits pleasantly between you.
The shuttle hums. City blocks unspool. You drift into the easy orbit of small talk that isn’t actually small: how campus smells like wet pine after a cleaning day; how Jo accidentally taught a seven-year-old to braid faster than he can; how Heejin grades essays with a ruler to keep her comments from becoming poems.
Sunoo listens the way he worked yesterday: carefully, without rush. When he speaks, it’s to offer small, precise things—how the set department rigs muslin to behave, how stage lights turn white into blue if you aren’t careful, how silence in a dressing room means panic in the hallway.
“Okay,” he says finally, a decision clicking into place. “Would you… come meet Ni-Ki with me? Before your meeting? If you have time. I told him I could bring a brain that understands fabric and community and not-looking-like-a-trophy.”
You blink. The idea pricks at a thread that wants to pull a bigger picture—fashion department, principal, victory boy, festival plans—but you set the tapestry of speculation aside. One thing at a time.
“I have about two hours,” you say, checking your phone: 11:27 AM. “If I leave by one-fifteen, I can still run through my notes.”
Sunoo brightens, a sunrise that doesn’t demand anything. “Perfect. He’s in Studio B. We’ll only take what you can spare.”
“Studio B—that’s the one with the elevated mirrors and the nightmare mannequin militia, right?”
“They’ve multiplied,” he intones solemnly. “We’ll need courage.”
“Courage is for cowards,” you counter automatically, then soften. “Fine, I’ll come. But if he says ‘finish line but not literal,’ I get to make one pun.”
“One,” he concedes. “And I’ll defend you from any winged-sandal backlash.”
The bus hisses to a stop at an intersection. A student with a trombone case squeezes past, apologizing to everyone and no one. You and Sunoo shuffle your knees to make space, and the brief bump of motion feels oddly like a seal on the plan.
He glances at the window, at the campus coming into view—brick and glass and the familiar sweep of the quad. “Thank you,” he says, quieter now. “For yesterday. For today.”
You angle a smile back at him. “Teamwork is efficient. Also cheaper than hourly consulting.”
He grins. “I can pay in gold leaf.”
“Tempting,” you say, and mean it.
The shuttle pulls onto the loop road. Students stand, lurch, grab poles, flow toward the doors. You rise with them, shouldering your bag. Sunoo stands too, offering a gallant little gesture for you to go first—less theatre, more habit. Outside, late-summer air folds around you both, the campus noise turning all at once from distant to immediate.
“Studio B,” he says, and you nod. Together, you fall into step, your meeting waiting on one side of the hour and a boy named for victory waiting on the other. Somewhere in the middle, weaved in silk.
Studio B greeted you like a battlefield: mirrors marching along the walls, bolts of fabric draped over barres, and a full platoon of mannequins frozen mid-sprint. In the center, a tall boy with a measuring tape around his neck was nose-to-nose with one particularly smug torso.
“Stand still,” he hissed at the mannequin, then muttered something in Japanese that sounded like it would blister paint. “You don’t even have lats. How are you wider today?”
Sunoo slowed, eyebrows tipping up. You matched his pace, both of you trying to parse who the enemy was.
The boy pivoted, measuring tape snapping against his palm. He was sharp angles and coiled energy, black hair mussed like he’d fought a gust of wind and mostly won. His gaze flicked to Sunoo, then to you, then back to the mannequin with theatrical disgust.
“Ni-Ki,” Sunoo said carefully, like he was approaching a feral cat with snacks. “This is Y/N. The brain I told you about.”
Ni-Ki’s eyes narrowed. “Is this the new braincell you mentioned?”
You arched a brow. Sunoo swatted Ni-Ki’s shoulder—not hard, but with meaning. “Be nice.”
Ni-Ki exhaled through his nose, then offered you a curt nod that was probably his version of “hello.”
“Fine. Welcome to the nightmare. I’m trying to make finish line but not literal, and Mr. Lats here keeps gaslighting me by existing.”
“Mr. Lats,” you echoed, fighting a smile. “Tough client.”
“Impossible,” Ni-Ki corrected, but you saw the corners of his mouth threaten treason.
Sunoo stepped aside, hip to the barre, the picture of noninterference. “I’ll observe,” he said lightly. “Pretend I’m a supportive ficus.”
You set your bag down and moved closer to the sketches pinned across a corkboard. Three silhouettes—sleek, kinetic, none of them trophy-shaped. Notes scribbled in the margins: surge, cadence, arrival. A swatch card clipped to the corner: matte off-white, graphite, a restrained sliver of gold.
“Okay,” you murmured, eyes adjusting to Ni-Ki’s shorthand. “You want triumph without the cosplay. Motion that feels inevitable, not ornamental.”
Ni-Ki folded his arms but tilted closer. “Exactly. No laurels. No checkered flags. Definitely no ‘GO TEAM’ plastered across someone’s ass.”
“Not even a tiny laurel?” Sunoo offered.
“Do you want me disowned?” Ni-Ki shot back, then flicked his gaze toward you. “Ideas?”
You traced the outline of a silhouette. “What if ‘finish line’ isn’t a symbol but the way the garment concludes? Think… those last ten meters when the body strips down to form and nothing extra matters.”
Ni-Ki didn’t smile, but his brows lifted like he might. “Keep talking.”
“Chevrons—subtle,” you said, sketching with your finger. “Not printed, but cut. Seamlines angled from rib to hip, like the body inventing its own arrows. Panels on the bias so the fabric wants to move. Pair matte with a whisper of reflective piping hidden in the seam—so under lights, it flashes only on the turn, like a pulse.”
Ni-Ki snatched up a pencil without looking, hand already in motion. “Chevrons that aren’t chevrons. Movement built in.” He flicked toward the swatches. “Graphite base, off-white insert, micro-gold piping?”
“Or graphite with an off-white facing that flashes when the hem lifts,” you countered. “Horsehair braid at the hem so it snaps back—clean finish-line energy.”
“Snaps back,” he echoed, jotting. His eyes slid toward his mannequin nemesis. “What about cadence?”
“Staggered hash marks,” you answered instantly, then slowed. “Not printed—topstitched. Double rows tightening at the side seams so when the wearer moves, the center reads like acceleration. Like a photo-finish scan.”
Ni-Ki went still for a beat—rare, you suspected—then nodded once, sharp. “Okay. Okay.” He tore a fresh sheet and sketched faster. “And arrival?”
You thought of the bookmark in your bag, the three uneven stars. “A shadow laurel.”
Ni-Ki’s jaw clenched. “I said no—”
“Shadow,” you repeated. “Not a wreath. A negative space motif at the clavicle—two curved seams that never meet. The mind completes it because it wants to. You make the absence of a laurel feel like the echo of one. It reads as earned.”
Ni-Ki blinked, then tilted his head the slightest degree. Approval, if you squinted. “Shadow laurel. Hnh.” He looked at the mannequin again, freshly contemptuous.
“You hearing this, Mr. Lats?"
“Mr. Lats is impressed,” Sunoo offered from the ficus zone. “He’s speechless.”
You circled the mannequin, studying the muslin drape Ni-Ki had basted. “These side panels—if you swap this muslin for organza godets cut on the bias, you’ll get that forward flare when someone strides. It reads continuity, not tutu. And here—” you pinched a dart “—turn this dart into a release pleat that opens at full extension. The garment only looks like it’s breaking tape when it’s actually in motion.”
Ni-Ki’s pencil hovered. “Breaking tape… only in motion.” He sketched, then paused to look at you properly for the first time, appraisal replacing suspicion. “You sure you run Textiles for Youth and not my department?”
“Textiles for Youth is your department when you want interns who already know how to set sleeves,” you said, deadpan.
Sunoo let out a quiet, delighted noise, and you felt it land between your shoulder blades like a pat you hadn’t known you needed.
Ni-Ki tapped the swatch card. “Palettes?”
“Keep the gold hungry,” you said. “Starve it. A whisper at the seam, a thread in the topstitch. Let the victory color behave like a reward—only visible when earned by movement or light. Off-white base reads hopeful. Graphite grounds it.”
He grunted approval. “Shoes?”
“We do not speak of shoes,” Sunoo intoned.
“No shoe jokes,” Ni-Ki warned, but his mouth betrayed him with half a grin.
You circled back to the corkboard, eyes landing on a scribble that read team finale. “How many looks?”
“Three leads and six ensemble,” Ni-Ki said, not looking up from his redraw. “Leads need to be modular for a quick rip from ‘in competition’ to ‘post-win’ without confetti.”
“Hidden silk tabs at the side seams for detachable armbands,” you said. “Not laurels—just clean bands that slot out with a snap and reattach at the waist like a sash that never crosses the chest. It signals transition without becoming pageant.”
“I work for snacks and functioning outlets,” you said.
“Done. Sunoo, put that in the budget.”
Sunoo held up his hands. “I’m merely a plant.”
“A very expensive plant,” Ni-Ki muttered, but his tone had softened. He slid one sketch free and held it up beside the mannequin, squinting, calibrating. “We need test fabric.”
You were already riffling through a bin. “Two meters of the graphite knit, one meter off-white, and… do you have reflective thread?” You glanced up. “If not, I can couch metallic between rows so it doesn’t scratch skin.”
Ni-Ki pointed to a drawer. “Middle right. Don’t use the thick stuff. It screams.”
“Shadow, not scream,” you echoed.
For the next forty minutes, the room shifted into the blessed choreography you loved: you marking seamlines in chalk, Ni-Ki slicing muslin with surgical confidence, Sunoo pinning reference photos to the mirror like a curator. He didn’t hover; he watched. Every so often, you felt his attention land on your hands, not like a weight, but like light—careful, considered, steady.
“Cadence panel ready,” you called, handing Ni-Ki a cut piece.
He took it without looking away from the form. “You draft like you’re choreographing.”
“You cut like you’re sprinting,” you said.
Sunoo’s reflection met yours in the mirror, amused. “And I… water plants.”
“You see,” Ni-Ki said without missing a beat. “That’s why you’re here. You catch the why before the what.” He held the panel to the mannequin, then pinned. The chevron seamline you’d imagined came alive, subtle as breath and twice as sure. “There. That’s the moment. That’s the last ten meters.”
The clock on the wall clicked over. 12:42 PM. Your meeting fluttered at the edge of your thoughts like a moth.
“I have to leave by one-fifteen,” you said reluctantly, stepping back to take in the trio of revised silhouettes tacked up together. “But if you sew this base today, I can swing back after my meeting and help with the topstitch plan.”
Ni-Ki nodded, already halfway to the machine. “Go impress the principal. Get your windows and your outlets. I’ll make this look like winning without cheating.”
Sunoo pushed off the barre, crossing to you. “I’ll walk you there?” It came out as a question and a promise at once.
“Please,” you said, shouldering your bag. You turned to Ni-Ki and offered a hand. “Truce with the mannequin?”
He gave your hand a quick squeeze, grip warm and sure. “Temporary. If he changes size again, I’m calling war.”
“Text me a photo of the first sew,” you said. “And remember—gold leaf like a whisper.”
“Shadow laurel,” he said, already threading the machine. “Not a wreath.”
You and Sunoo slipped out into the hall. Behind you, the whir of the machine started, quick and certain. He matched your pace, a quiet cadence down the corridor buzzing with festival preparation.
“You were…” He searched for the right word and settled on honesty. “You were incredible in there.”
You huffed a laugh. “He did most of it. I just… tilted gravity.”
Sunoo glanced at you, eyes bright in the fluorescent wash. “That’s a dangerous phrase to say around an Aphrodite kid.”
“Consider it a shared license,” you said, and he smiled like he might frame the sentence.
Outside, the campus light was softer than you remembered, like the weather had decided to cooperate with your pitch deck. You checked the time again—enough cushion to breathe, not enough to spiral.
“After?” he asked. “If you have capacity. We can test the rip-tabs and strategize the ensemble looks.”
“After,” you agreed. “If I win us the atrium, we’ll christen it with muslin confetti.”
Sunoo bumped your shoulder with the most careful fraction of contact. “Deal.”
The admin wing always smelled faintly of lemon cleaner and old decisions. You and Sunoo slowed outside the conference room with the glass panel—PRINCIPAL’S OFFICE: CONFERENCE A etched in neat serif—and did the small, awkward dance of swapping contacts without dropping your phones.
“Text me when you’re free,” he said, thumb hovering over your name entry like he didn’t want to misspell the simplest part.
“I will,” you promised, keying in Sunoo—gold leaf before you could overthink it.
The door cracked open. A voice cut through the corridor, surprised and familiar all at once.
“Sunoo?”
You both looked up.
“Jay??” Sunoo’s eyes widened. The boy in the doorway had dark hair swept into a tidy part and an expression like the punchline had arrived early. He wore a clean-lined blazer over a black tee, the kind of student who could pass for faculty until he smiled.
Behind him, the principal chuckled, stepping into view. “Hi, how are you, Y/N? I’m so happy you could make it.” His gaze pinged to Sunoo and back to you with merry efficiency. “And I see you already know Sunoo—our wonderful representative of the student body for the upcoming fashion show.”
Your jaw slipped, just enough for air to find it. You pivoted to Sunoo. He looked away and produced a very innocent whistle at absolutely nothing.
Jay turned to you, hand outstretched and hospitable. “I’m Jay. Logistics lead for the festival committee. I’ve heard about your club—big fan of kids using real tools instead of glue guns.”
“Tools and glue guns,” you said, shaking his hand. “Balanced diet.”
“Come in, then,” the principal said, ushering the three of you inside. “Let’s make this official.”
The conference room was all clean edges and neutral carpet, a wall-mounted screen waiting for someone to give it purpose. You took a seat across from the principal, Sunoo sliding in beside you, and Jay diagonally opposite with a manila folder that looked far too well-behaved.
“First,” the principal began, folding his hands, “thank you for all the work your club put into the open house yesterday. The banner was beautiful.”
“Community effort,” you said, heat rising to your ears. You set your iPad on the table and opened a notes page, stylus hovering.
“Good.” He nodded once. “Which brings us to the festival. As leader of Textiles for Youth, you’ll oversee the share-out and demonstrations. We’d also like you to collaborate with the fashion club’s showcase—joint programming to highlight craft alongside runway.”
Jay slid a one-page brief across the table. “Here’s the outline: a week-long schedule with rotating features. Fashion show on the third evening; workshops and open studios every day. Your club’s ‘make-and-take’ station scored high in our surveys—parents loved it. We’ll slot that near the main foot-traffic corridors.”
You jotted bullets, fingers settling into the cadence of capture: daily demos; safety volunteers; open studio windows; foot-traffic maps; liability waivers. The bookmark in your bag pressed a small rectangle against your thigh, like a quiet yes.
“Budget-wise,” Jay continued, flipping his folder, “we’re consolidating rentals. If you share risers and lighting with the theatre department, we can redirect some funds to materials. We’d cover basic consumables—muslin, thread, ink—if you provide your own tools and storage.”
“Storage is… a puzzle,” you admitted, glancing at Sunoo before you could stop yourself. “We’re at capacity. New donations are living in… creative piles.”
The principal made an understanding face. “Noted. Space is tight across campus, but let’s see what we can do.”
Sunoo had been quiet, hands folded, eyes on the table like it had secrets. The principal turned to him. “Sunoo? Thoughts? Suggestions for the joint features?”
He looked up. For a second, he didn’t speak, as if weighing the line between representation and requesting. Then he sat a little straighter.
“Yes,” he said. “Two, actually.” He glanced at you and then away, choosing his words with care. “First—feature ‘process paths’ around the runway. Not just finished garments, but the steps that got us there. Muslin mockups, stitch samplers, dye cards. Let people walk the road in miniature before they see the show.”
Jay tapped his pen against the folder, clearly pleased. “Love that. Education plus spectacle.”
“And second,” Sunoo continued, voice even, “Textiles for Youth needs more space. They’re carrying more than a club—they’re a bridge to the community. Right now they can’t accept certain donations or properly store what they have. If we want this collaboration to actually function, they need an expanded room or at least additional storage adjacent to the studio wing.”
Your stylus paused mid-stroke. You turned to look at him. He kept his gaze steady on the principal, the faintest pink at the tips of his ears the only tell that he’d stepped past a line he didn’t usually cross.
The principal steepled his fingers. “That’s… specific,” he said, not unkindly.
“It’s practical,” Sunoo replied, still calm. “We can’t show ‘process’ if the process is tripping over boxes. And kids don’t come back if they feel like an afterthought.”
Silence lingered for a beat—thoughtful, not cold. Jay broke it with a nod. “We’ve got a retired storage classroom near Studio B that holds old display cases. It’s slated for surplus review. If we clear it by next week, it could serve as overflow for textiles during festival load-in—and possibly longer, if it works.”
Your pulse did a small, disbelieving leap. “That would… solve a lot.”
The principal turned to Jay. “Write me a memo with a quick inventory and a cost to move the cases. If it’s under facilities’ threshold, we can expedite.”
Jay was already scribbling. “On it.”
“And you,” the principal said to you, the corner of his mouth tilting, “send me a one-page proposal for how you’d use the additional space: shelving, safety, check-in/check-out for tools. Bullet points are fine. If I can show that we’re supporting a program with clear impact, it helps me argue for permanence.”You were back to your notes in a flash: Shelving plan; labeled bins; tool wall; inventory app; student volunteer shifts. Your gratitude felt too large for the room, so you kept it in the cleanness of your handwriting.
Sunoo sat perfectly still, like any movement might break the spell.
“Now,” Jay said, flipping to a color-coded schedule, “co-programming. If the runway is Wednesday at seven, we schedule your open studio from three to five, with a fifteen-minute ‘thread-to-runway’ talk at five-thirty. I’ll handle chairs. You handle content.” He slid a second page over to you. “Also—outlets. I circled the ones that historically behave.”
You almost laughed. “A rare breed.”
“We nurture them,” Jay said dryly.
The principal glanced at the clock. “We’re nearly at time. Any last asks?”
You hesitated, then decided to be the kind of person who asked. “Atrium strip by the big windows?”
Jay made a thoughtful noise. “If theatre loads out their flats by Monday, the strip is open. It’s high visibility. We’d need stanchions and a volunteer to manage flow.”
“I can cover volunteers,” you said. “We’ll bring signage and safety mats.”
The principal considered, then nodded. “All right. Atrium strip on a trial. Impress me.”
“I’ll embroider it onto a banner if we do,” you said before you could stop yourself.
Sunoo’s smile flickered—the private kind he didn’t give to rooms.
“Excellent,” the principal said, standing. “Jay, draft the storage memo. Y/N, email me the space plan by tomorrow morning if you can. Sunoo, coordinate the process path exhibit with fashion club leads and—” she looked at you with a glint “—loop Y/N in on any textile-adjacent decisions.”
“Already looping,” he said, and somehow made it sound official.
Chairs slid back, papers re-foldered. As you rose, you caught Sunoo’s eye. He didn’t say anything—he didn’t have to. The whistle earlier had turned into something steadier: a promise he’d followed through on without asking you to carry it.
“Thank you,” you said softly, more to him than the room.
He gave a small shrug that meant of course and don’t mention it and mention it later when we’re not being watched.
In the hallway, Jay peeled off toward facilities with a salute and a “Text me bin dimensions,” leaving you and Sunoo by the glass door again, the lemon-cleaner air sharper now that the meeting adrenaline had ebbed.
“You’re full of surprises,” you said—half accusation, half awe.
“I was going to tell you,” he confessed, a little sheepish. “Later. Feels less… self-congratulatory when you’re not literally standing under the word Principal.”
You snorted. “You did good.”
“So did you,” he said, then, lighter: “Atrium windows—that’s your light.”
“It’s our light, if Ni-Ki’s shadow laurels want a cameo.”
“Deal.” He stepped back, leaving space for you to pass. “Studio B after your email? We’ll test the tabs and pretend we’re ensemble.”
You checked the time—1:07 PM—and felt the afternoon slot neatly into place, like a seam pressed flat. “After my email,” you agreed. “And I’ll bring snacks. Mannequin bribes.”
He pressed a hand to his chest. “Finally, peace with Mr. Lats.”
“Temporary,” you warned with a smile as you headed down the corridor. “War if he changes size again.”
“Then we fight smart,” Sunoo called after you, warmth trailing the words.
You tucked the embroidered bookmark into your iPad case, a small constellation riding shotgun beside your brand-new plan, and walked toward the atrium windows you fully intended to claim.
Studio B hummed with the sound of scissors biting through muslin when you pushed the door open. Ni-Ki was hunched over the drafting table, pencil moving in swift, surgical strokes. Sunoo was perched on a stool nearby, sleeves rolled to the elbow, looking like he’d been supervising but really just absorbing the chaos.
You dropped your bag beside the mirrored wall and exhaled. “So. Meeting debrief.”
Both heads turned toward you, Sunoo’s attentive, Ni-Ki’s skeptical until you said the magic word.
“We got the atrium strip,” you announced.
Ni-Ki blinked, then gave a curt nod that was really just his version of fist-pumping. “Good. More visibility. People trip over visibility.”
“And storage,” you added, pulling out your iPad. “Jay’s clearing a surplus room. If facilities cooperates, we’ll finally have shelves instead of textile mountains.”
“Shelves,” Sunoo said reverently, as if he were picturing them in stained glass.
“We’ll need volunteers, though,” you went on. “Someone to manage the atrium, someone to run the demos, someone to keep the kids from eating the fabric-safe ink.”
Sunoo leaned forward, chin in hand. “I can ask Heeseung. He’s usually trapped in Studio A, composing something that makes the walls vibrate. But if I drag him into daylight, he could help with both volunteering and—” he paused for effect, “—runway music.”
You blinked. “Runway music?”
“Transitions, ambient underscoring, the whole vibe before and after. He’s brilliant at it. Half the theatre kids already pirate his tracks for their reels.” Sunoo’s mouth tipped, a little proud. “If you want seamless—he’s the one.”
You considered, stylus tapping your notes. “A textiles runway with live-composed underscoring… That could shift the whole energy. Make it feel curated, not cobbled.”
Ni-Ki muttered around his pencil, “As long as it doesn’t sound like an epic battle scene, fine.”
“I’ll make sure it doesn’t,” Sunoo promised.
“Good,” you said, catching yourself smiling. “Let’s pencil Heeseung in.”
From your bag, you fished out the bribe you’d picked up on the way: a small paper bag, grease-spotted and fragrant. “Also, peace offering. Chocolate mint pistachio popcorn.”
Sunoo’s head popped up immediately, eyes lighting. “No way.”
You pinched a small handful, offering it across the space. He didn’t reach for it. Instead, he leaned closer, eyes bright with mischief, and ate straight from your fingers, crunching happily.
Your brain short-circuited for a full second—heat rushing uninvited into your cheeks. “Sunoo!”
He chewed with exaggerated innocence. “What? It’s efficient.”
Ni-Ki, without looking up from his drafting, smirked into the collar of his shirt. “Efficient. Sure.”
You snatched another kernel and shoved it into Sunoo’s palm this time. “Use your hands like a normal human.”
He grinned, unbothered, popping it into his mouth. “But then you wouldn’t get flustered.”
Your stylus clattered against the iPad a little louder than necessary. “Focus. Volunteers. Scheduling.”
Ni-Ki’s pencil scratched across paper, the smirk still tugging at his mouth. “Don’t mind me,” he said lightly. “I’ll just be over here… drafting the ensemble while you two work out your feeding rituals.”
Sunoo’s laugh caught in his throat, the kind he tried to smother but couldn’t quite. You groaned and buried your face in your notes, trying to will your pulse back down.
The popcorn bag sat innocently on the table, a dangerous weapon in the wrong hands—or mouth.
Clipboards (okay, your iPad and a scrap of muslin Ni-Ki insisted on using as “real paper”) came out, and Studio B shifted gears from chaos to a functional war room.
“Time blocks,” you said, drawing columns. “Festival runs seven days. Open studio windows daily, runway on Wednesday night. We need coverage for: atrium demo station, studio tours, donation intake, and a roaming ‘fix-it’ bench.”
Sunoo propped his chin on his knuckles, already in. “I can anchor Tuesday and Thursday afternoons in the atrium—class in the mornings, rehearsal in the evenings. Monday I’m free after two.”
“Put me in for mornings,” Ni-Ki said without looking up. “I draft best angry and early. I can manage donation intake plus triage the ‘my grandma’s silk’ situations.”
You made boxes. “Jo’s fast with kids—slotting him Saturday and Sunday midday for make-and-take. Heejin can supervise the dye cards and lecture anyone who tries to drink the liquid dyes.”
You glanced at Sunoo. “Page Heeseung for runway music consults: Monday 3–5, Wednesday soundcheck 4–6, post-show strike.”
Sunoo tapped notes into his phone. “Heeseung will grumble about being put to work during the day but he’ll come for snacks.”
“Snacks are a budget line now,” you deadpanned, adding volunteer snacks (nuts, fruit, popcorn—NOT ink) to the list.
“Roles,” Ni-Ki said, flicking a glance over. “We need a flow boss.”
“Jay’s our logistics lead; I’ll coordinate with him,” you said. “Within the team: I’ll be overall textiles lead plus atrium design; Ni-Ki, fashion build lead plus runway quick-changes; Sunoo, liaison slash process-path curator slash volunteer whip.”
Sunoo saluted the air. “I accept my many hats. I will wear them askew.”
“Color-code the schedule,” Ni-Ki added. “Graphite for runway, off-white for studio, gold dots for anything that needs a runner.”
You grinned and shaded cells accordingly. “Gold is hungry. We starve it.”
Sunoo’s smile crept in at the edge. “Shadow laurel energy.”
You carved up the rest—two-hour shifts, overlap buffers, a fifteen-minute reset between sessions so no one quietly expired behind a loom. By the time you scrawled VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION: TUES 10 AM, STUDIO B across the top, the plan looked sturdy enough to walk on its own.
Ni-Ki’s phone rattled across the drafting table. He glanced at the screen, answered with a clipped “Yo,” listened, nodded once, and hung up.
You raised a brow. “Where to?”
“Picking up Sunghoon,” Ni-Ki said, already pocketing his keys and a swatch ring. “He wants to come upstairs to draft ideas. Also claims he needs a piece of Y/N’s brain for some ice sculpture he got roped into for the showcase.”
You turned—deliberately—toward Sunoo, fixing him with a look that was ninety percent playful and ten percent I know exactly what you’re doing. “Exploiting my brain now, are we?”
Sunoo leaned back on the stool, all feigned innocence, dimples weaponized. “Not exploiting—just making excellent use of your brilliant handiwork.”
“Mm-hmm.” You flicked a popcorn kernel at him; he caught it between his teeth with unnerving precision.
Ni-Ki smirked, already halfway to the door. “I’ll bring the Ice Prince. Try not to melt him before he gets here.”
“Remind him the sculpture cannot be literal victory, trophies, or an oversized shoe,” Sunoo called.
Ni-Ki jabbed a finger at you without looking back. “Save me a square of your brain—he’s serious.”
The door thudded shut behind him.
You let out a laugh, shaking your head, then tapped your schedule. “Alright, ‘volunteer whip.’ Draft the group text. Make it friendly—but terrifying.”
Sunoo’s thumbs blurred across his screen. “On it. Adding: snacks provided; Y/N’s brain use subject to consent.”
“Thank you,” you replied primly, smile betraying you anyway.
He looked up then, gentler. “We’re building something that deserves a big room.”
You felt it land—the truth of it, the work humming under the flirting. “Then let’s fill it,” you said, and started a new column: Supply Run—Tonight (shelving labels, safety mats, reflective thread, mint pistachio popcorn—essential).
From the corridor, the faint echo of Ni-Ki’s voice carried—sharp, amused—and another answering voice you didn’t know yet, smooth as carved ice.
You straightened the muslin, set your stylus, and rolled your shoulders once. “Ready for Sunghoon?”
Sunoo’s grin tilted. “Ready to watch you say no to a swan and yes to negative-space victory."
The door banged open on a gust of oven air and a boy’s patience fraying at the edges.
“Why is the first floor Tartarus?” Sunghoon demanded the hallway at large, then trudged in and let a duffel bag thud to the studio floor. “How do you people function? I almost melted between the lobby and the stairs.”
“Hydration,” Ni-Ki said from the communal sofa, one arm flung over his eyes. “And rage.”
You glanced into the open duffel as Sunghoon kicked it toward the mirrors. Inside: a pair of well-loved ice skates, sculpting chisels wrapped in cloth rolls, a rasp, a heat gun… and an honest-to-god ice pick.
Your eyebrows lifted. Sunoo noticed, leaned in so close you felt the smile in his voice against your ear.
“Elsa needs his time in the campus ice rooms.”
A laugh burst out of you before you could swallow it. Sunghoon stopped mid-grumble, blinking.
“Hey, Ni-Ki,” he called, pointing at you, “are you sure this is the same person who’s supposed to save my sculptures…?”
“Damn right I am,” Ni-Ki said, not moving.
Sunghoon’s mouth curved, skeptical flipping to intrigued. “Okay then, textile hero. Come save me from literal trophies and winged sandals.”
You clapped your hands once. “Ground rules: no laurels, no checkered flags, no giant shoes.”
Sunoo’s grin tilted. “We do gravity—on purpose.”
Sunghoon nudged the duffel wider with his foot and pulled out a folded sketch. “Brief says ‘victory icon,’ which is a trap. I’ve got a nine-hundred-pound block arriving tomorrow morning. I need something that reads movement, culmination, inevitability—not a sports-banquet centerpiece.”
“Shadow laurel,” Ni-Ki murmured from the couch. “Work the negative space.”
Sunghoon frowned. “Break it down like I’m half-delirious.”
You slid to the low table, grabbed a fresh sheet from Ni-Ki’s stack, and started sketching. “No wreath. You carve what isn’t there. Two arcs that never meet, suspended tension. Let the light finish the thought.”
Interest sparked in Sunghoon’s eyes as he crouched beside you. “Arcs that almost kiss. Hm.”
“And a finish line without tape,” you added, sweeping a ribbon through the arcs, tapering it into air. “A plane that cuts diagonally—thin near the top, thicker near the base—so it feels like a surge. Side view: line. Front view: breath.”
He leaned in. “Elegant. But if I chase it too thin, it'll break itself.”
“Then layer it,” Sunoo said, circling to your other side. “Step the planes. A surface, then a ghost plane an inch back. Light hits both, the brain connects them.”
You nodded. “And let’s starve it of shine, the way we starved the garments of gold. Frost the inner plane with tool marks so it scatters light. Polish the outer arc to a mirror so it drags the room inside. Arrival happens in the space between.”
Sunghoon’s grin edged sharper. “So Yin and Yang interacting with each other.” His gaze flicked from the ice pick to you. “What about cadence?”
You sketched a few staggered ticks at the base, then crossed them out. “Surface marks cheapen it. Rhythm belongs in the void. Core a string of pinholes along a curve under the ribbon—tiny, even. Light will bead through them like a pulse. From head-on it disappears, but as someone walks past, it flickers alive. Movement that only exists in motion.”
He stilled—the kind of still that means agreement. “I can run 6mm cores if I keep the spine thick. Strong enough.” He flipped the page, already listing cuts. “Tools: long-neck die grinder, V-chisel, flat, rifflers. I’ll need the cold room minimum four hours.”
“Sound pass-through?” Sunoo asked, thumbs moving. “Heeseung can score a slow swell that hits when people catch the reveal angle.”
“Good. No timpani,” Sunghoon said, brisk now.
Ni-Ki cracked an eye from the sofa. “If this turns into a shoe, I’m cutting ties.”
“Everyone’s haunted by footwear,” Sunghoon muttered, amused, then turned to you. “Symbolism? Something for the plaque people.”
“Call it Essence,” you said. “Sub-line: ‘Victory lives in the space between what almost touches.’ Let the principal write the rest. We’ll set the ribbon so the runway sightline hits it dead-on at the finale.”
Sunoo gave a low whistle. “That’s a director’s brain at work.”
“It’s a loom brain,” you corrected, though warmth leaked through anyway.
Sunghoon rose, shoulders rolling like a skater testing fresh ice. “All right. I can work with this.” He pointed a chisel at you in mock ceremony. “You, thread-witch, get first look when the block lands.”
“Only if you stop calling me thread-witch in front of donors,” you deadpanned.
“No promises.” His smirk softened. “But… thanks.”
You cracked the popcorn bag like a gavel. “Fuel, then schedule.” A kernel bounced off Ni-Ki’s shoulder; he sighed, sat up, and surrendered to snacking.
Sunoo slipped onto the stool beside you, his shoulder hovering a respectful inch from yours. “Heeseung’s in Monday and Wednesday. I also conned Jay into finding anti-slip mats for the ice station.”
“Perfect,” Sunghoon said, already roughing side elevations. “I’ll email facilities for cold-room time. If they whine about condensation, we’ll bring towels and shut down their souls.”
Ni-Ki swung his legs off the couch, revived by sugar and salt. “Team roster: Y/N, you and I mock up shadow-laurel seamlines on muslin tonight. Sunoo, process-path curation and volunteer whip texts. Sunghoon, cold-room booking and tool log. Tomorrow, nine sharp. No AC, only righteousness.”
Sunghoon groaned. “Righteousness doesn’t drop core temp.”
“Popcorn does,” Sunoo countered, slipping a kernel to Sunghoon like a zookeeper feeding a lion. Sunghoon took it without lifting his eyes from the sketch.
You laughed, the sound threading into Studio B’s steady hum. Plans tacked themselves to cork. Heat pressed against the windows. Somewhere, a choir ran scales; somewhere else, a janitor swore at an outlet that refused to cooperate.
But here—here was momentum: a shadow laurel that never touched, a ribbon more air than ice, a runway built to reveal not just the work but the why. Sunoo’s knee brushed yours—deliberate accident. Ni-Ki’s pencil resumed its brisk staccato. Sunghoon’s chisel caught the light like a promise.
“Okay, team,” you said, flipping to a clean page. “Let’s make victory look like effort, not ego.”
“Finally,” Ni-Ki muttered, satisfied.
“Finally,” Sunghoon echoed, grinning.
Sunoo tipped his head toward you, quiet and certain. “Lead on.”
The knock was polite but insistent, the kind that had history with forgetful artists.
“Evening,” the security guard said through the cracked door. “Building locks itself in thirty. Don’t make me fish you out at midnight.”
You glanced at the clock—11:28—and nodded. “We’re packing up.”
Ni-Ki slid patterns into sleeves with surgical speed. Sunghoon rolled his chisels, the clink of metal tidy and final. Sunoo helped you gather stray pins like he’d trained his fingers to find shine in low light.
At the stairwell, plans forked. “Late-night ramen,” Sunghoon announced, shouldering his duffel. “We’ve got the munchies.”
“Text me the cold-room confirmation,” Ni-Ki said, already halfway down the steps.
“We will,” Sunoo called, then turned to you. “Bus together?”
You hesitated only long enough to pretend you were deciding. “Yeah.”
Outside, the campus air had cooled to something bearable; the brick held heat like old stories. The quad lamps cast soft halos. You and Sunoo fell into step, shoes whispering over the walk.
At the stop, the shuttle sign flickered its indifferent countdown. You both watched it lie for a moment, then looked anywhere else.
“Good memories?” he asked, gentle, as if the question were a fragile box.
You considered. “I was never scared of spiders,” you said. “Or silkworms. Or anything with too many legs. They were… company. When kids figured out what my family line was called, some of them decided I was a walking curse.” You smiled without humor. “So I learned to make friends who didn’t care about rumors.”
He angled toward you, attention like a blanket rather than a spotlight.
“I kept a little cardboard box in my window,” you went on, softer now. “Poked air holes, lined it with mulberry leaves. Raised a few silkworms to moths one summer. Watched them spin and spin and disappear into their own work. I thought—if I cocooned hard enough, maybe I’d come out something else.”
Sunoo’s mouth tilted, not in amusement but recognition. “Did it help?”
“Sometimes,” you said. “The spinning was… peaceful. But you still have to come out.”
He nodded like he knew that part well. “We had a lake behind our apartment complex,” he said. “My mom and I would walk there after dinner. Doves would follow us like we were smuggling breadcrumbs even when we weren’t.” A breath of a laugh. “Swans, too, if they were in a mood to tolerate anyone. They’d come close. I’d sit on the dock and talk to them about math homework and which Pokémon was a better starter, and they’d just… listen.”
“That sounds perfect,” you said, and meant it.
“Until the other kids decided it meant I was manipulating them,” he added, eyes on the dark line of trees. “Too pretty to be safe, too gentle to be real. ‘Aphrodite’s spawn’ like I was an invasive species. So I tried to be… less. Stiffer. Quieter. If I made myself angular enough, maybe I’d stop catching light.”
“Did it help?” you echoed, and it wasn’t teasing.
“Sometimes,” he said. “Mostly it made me tired. The birds would still come. That made it worse for the narrative.” He glanced at you, something wry and soft all at once. “I didn’t know how to explain that being looked at and being seen are not the same thing.”
You felt that like a string plucked under your ribs. “People love stories that absolve them of choice.”
“Yeah.” He nudged a pebble with his shoe. “I wish I’d had your silkworm box.”
You smiled, small. “I’ll loan you mine. With better ventilation.”
The shuttle’s headlights swung into view, washing the curb in brief theater. You boarded with the late-night crowd—three students half-asleep, someone hugging a sketch tube, a couple sharing fries in reverent silence. You and Sunoo took the twin seats over the wheel well, windows humming faintly against their seals.
The bus pulled away. Campus receded into a string of lamps.
“I used to keep a little notebook,” you said, surprising yourself. “One good thread a day. Something worth weaving in. A teacher who praised my backstitch. A kid who asked if silkworms tickle. A spider that spun between the mailbox and my bike handle—and held fast even when I rode away.”
Sunoo’s eyes curved with a smile. “Do you still?”
“Not on paper,” you admitted. “But… today counts. Storage room. Atrium light. And a boy who came up with ‘process paths’ like he’d hacked into my brain.”
Color rose in his cheeks—pleased and embarrassed all at once. “If I’d known you then, I’d have sat under your window and listened to you talk to moths.”
“And I’d have sat on your dock arguing about Pokémon while the swans glared at us,” you said.
“Froakie,” he declared.
“Wrong,” you said gravely. “Bulbasaur.”
He clutched his chest, scandalized. “A contrarian of principle.”
“An eco-conscious strategist,” you corrected.
The bus jolted over a seam; your shoulders brushed, and neither of you pulled away. Outside, downtown streamed past—neon pooled in rainwater, a deli’s sign burning stubborn at 11:47 PM.
“I hate that people were cruel to you,” he said suddenly, eyes still on the glass. “That they called you cursed, when really you were making homes for small lives.”
Your throat tightened. “I hate that they taught you to shrink. That kindness on you looked like a trick.”
He nodded, eyes shining just enough to slow your breath. “We can unlearn it.”
“Yeah,” you whispered. “We can.”
Silence stretched—the kind that shifts a room, even when the room is moving forty kilometers an hour.
He turned his palm up on the seat between you—not a flourish, just an open offer with no clock on it. You set two fingers there, light enough to pull back if you chose. You didn’t. His thumb traced a faint circle over your knuckles, a question left soft, without insistence.
“Tomorrow,” he said, voice steady and warm, “let’s add ‘no shrinking’ to the volunteer orientation.”
“Rule three,” you agreed. “No trophies. Gravity on purpose. And no shrinking.”
“Deal.” He released your hand like it was a promise kept, not something lost. “Also, snacks.”
“Snacks are rule zero,” you said with mock solemnity. “They predate the system.”
His laugh came low, unguarded. The bus sighed to a halt a block from your place. Bags shifted, polite excuse-me’s traded, and then you stepped into night air that smelled like rain, though the sky withheld it.
“I’ll walk you to your door,” he said. Not a question.
“I live there,” you pointed, falling into the easy choreography of the sidewalk. On your stoop, you lingered with the key in your hand.
“Thank you for the bus,” you said.
“Thank you for the thread,” he replied.
You rolled your eyes, fond. “Go to sleep, Sunoo.”
“Text me when you’re home safe,” he countered, then realized what he’d said and laughed at himself. “Right. You… are home.”
“I’ll text you anyway,” you said, and the way his smile softened made you want to add three more good threads to the day.
He stepped back, hands in pockets, a bow too small to be anything but real. “Tomorrow—Studio B.”
“Tomorrow,” you echoed.
Inside, you leaned your back against the door for one breath before moving. The room held the day’s heat like a long memory and, for once, you didn’t mind. You tugged out the little embroidered bookmark and set it by your bed, three uneven stars catching the lamplight.
On the bus ride, you’d felt something tilt again. Not gravity, exactly. Choice, practiced until it felt like muscle.You typed home to a contact named Gold Leaf and smiled at the typing bubble that popped up immediately in reply.
Days wove themselves into a rhythm you could almost hum. Mornings in Studio B—pins, patterns, and Sunghoon’s ice-block reservation emails that read like tactical briefings. Afternoons split between the textile room and the newly cleared storage: Heejin blessing every shelf with her label maker, Jo stacking bins with ritualistic precision, Sunoo hauling boxes and cracking jokes until your shoulders loosened.
Heeseung proved nothing like Ni-Ki’s ominous lore. He blew into Studio B with a grin and a travel mug, talking tempo and timbre like a street magician, then settled cross-legged on the floor to build a playlist that pulsed from heartbeat to hush, as if he’d hardwired the room to a metronome. “Inside is a place,” he told you cheerfully when you teased him about his rumored aversion to daylight—then promptly dragged the whole group outside to test how wind warped sound through open doors. Extrovert, myth dismantled.
By the third day, you nearly collided with Jungwon in the hall—clipboard in hand, bright-eyed, the look of someone who knew where threads belonged before they were spun. Fate’s cousin, spine-shiver guaranteed.
“Y/N,” he said, breathless from too many stairs and too much excitement, “is it true you’re helping people stuck with fashion stuff?” His voice dropped conspiratorial. “I need to impress someone from engineering. Tastefully. Without… lab goggles.”
“Flattered,” you said, already shaking your head. “Judges don’t get coaching. Conflict of interest. And lab goggles are a look, actually.”
Sunoo giggled behind you. Jungwon shot him a glare. “Don’t you dare. I know something you don’t.” With that, he spun like a cat with a secret and disappeared down the corridor, mischief trailing in his wake.
You and Sunoo were still laughing when Heejin snapped her fingers like a stage manager. “Shelves. Now.” Jo, recovered from his scare, pushed a cart with the solemnity of penance.
Evenings became for bus walks and the kind of texts that made the night feel shorter. On the rare hour you hadn’t seen or heard from Sunoo, it felt strange—like a loose thread begging to be tucked.
By Friday, the four of you collapsed into a booth at the campus pizza joint. Red-checkered tablecloths, garlic thick in the air, a jukebox still convinced it was 1983. Jo handled toppings like a seasoned diplomat. Heeseung breezed in mid-song, declared mushrooms “percussive,” and charmed the server into surrendering extra napkins.
Halfway through a gloriously unstable slice, you remembered the practical demon perched on your shoulder. “We should line up a standby medic for the showcase,” you said, sipping soda like it could dilute the what-ifs riding your tone.
Sunoo froze mid-chew, eyes cutting to you. Heejin shot upright so fast Jo nearly baptized the table in cola.
“My second cousin!” she blurted. “Jaeyun—Sim Jake—you know him? Life-sci paramedics. I’ll text him. He’ll be thrilled for an excuse to dodge studying.” Already, her thumbs were flying.
Startled, fond, you laughed. “Look at you, public-safety crusader.” A beat. “Though—you realize you just volunteered to text a boy for me?”
Heejin paused, then smirked. “For us,” she corrected, the word clicking neatly into place. Somewhere along the way, her frost toward Sunoo had evaporated into nothing. Without even looking at him, she added, “And if Jake shows up, I get bragging rights at family dinner forever.”
Sunoo lifted his slice in salute. “To gloating.”
“To gloating,” Jo echoed, grateful no drinks had been lost in the chaos.
Heeseung tapped an easy rhythm on the table. “If he’s in, I’ll loop him into comms. Headset, code word for ‘someone fainted near the ice but it’s probably heartstuff, not drama.’”
“Code word?” Sunoo mused. “Not ‘shoe.’ Too traumatic.”
“Silk,” you said—surprised at how right it landed. “If you hear that, it’s medical. No questions.”
Heejin, still typing, flicked her eyes up. “Text sent. Told him the pay is pizza and prestige.”
“Add popcorn,” Sunoo said. “Chocolate mint pistachio. Critical medical supply.”
You nudged his knee under the table; he nudged back—an invisible rhythm practiced enough to be reflex. “Thank you,” you said to all of them, and meant it. For a moment the table went quiet—warm, settled—until Heeseung broke it with a clap.
“Okay, playlist thought. If Jake’s on standby, we need a soft stinger for emergencies. Crew recognizes it, audience doesn’t panic. Like… a hush bell.”
“Windchimes?” Jo suggested.
“That screams spa,” Heeseung said. “Better: a single brushed cymbal, layered with wave ambience.”
Sunoo lifted his crust like a conductor’s baton. “We’re about to look unreasonably competent.”
“We are,” Heejin said, sitting back down, her phone buzzing. She glanced at it and grinned. “He’s in.”
The booth erupted—small cheers, a couple of taps on laminated wood like a drumroll. You leaned back, stomach warm with pizza and relief, and watched the three of them glow at each other like a constellation finally named.
Sunoo caught your eye over the tilt of his glass, a question and a promise folded into the curve of his smile.
You held it, returned it, and nudged a stray kernel of popcorn—produced from your bag like a magic trick—toward his side of the table. He didn’t take it with his fingers. He leaned in and stole it from yours, quick as a secret, making Heejin sigh and Jo squeak, and earning you a scandalized look from the jukebox.
“Rule zero,” Sunoo murmured, not bothering to hide his grin.
“Snacks,” you said.
“And no shrinking,” he added.
“And no trophies,” Heejin tossed in, because of course she did.
“For T.F.Y.,” Jo finished solemnly, as if offering a toast.
You lifted your cup. “For T.F.Y.”
Four cups met with a clink. The jukebox, in its strange wisdom, queued a song that made life feel lighter than it had any right to. Outside, streetlights stitched the block into a clean seam.
Inside, you had your people, your plan, and a cousin named Jake who, apparently, made house calls for pizza.
By late afternoon the halls buzzed with pre-festival tension—cords taped down in neat black veins, ladders folded like sleeping giraffes, posters bristling on cork. Outside Studio B, the trash bins told their own saga: Red Bulls stacked inside Monsters, paper cups smudged with lipstick ghosts. You nudged the door open with your hip, arms full of bolts for Ni-Ki, and the smell of gaffer tape and hot dust hit you like a memory you hadn’t lived yet.
“Supplies for our victory goblin,” you announced, dropping the fabric onto the cutting table.
Sunoo followed with a box of notions and a half-smile. He clocked the bins, tilted his head, and flicked his wrist in a small, conspiratorial gesture.
The mess… shifted. Nothing disappeared—he didn’t cheat physics—but the battered plastic took on the sheen of brushed metal, the labels stacking themselves into a tidy totem of green and cobalt. The cloying sugar reek thinned into citrus and cold air. He held the glamour the way you’d hold a door: brief, courteous, useful.
“For morale,” he said. “We honor the fallen.”
You snorted, grateful, and turned back to the bolts: graphite knit, off-white twill, a vicious little spool of reflective thread. Your hands knew what to do. Your chest did not.
The tightness began as a band around your ribs, breath threading through like a needle too small for the job. The room sharpened—the slap of shoes down the hall, the test-thump of Heeseung’s kick drum, Ni-Ki’s pencil cutting quick, irritated lines through the air. A week’s worth of ifs came crashing down all at once.
What if the atrium light turns sickly? What if the kids freeze? What if the storage room reeks of mildew and someone’s mom emails the principal? What if Arachne gets whispered like a curse again? What if the whole thing collapses because you miscounted safety pins?
You set the twill down too carefully. “I—” Half a laugh, brittle. “I don’t know what I’m doing.”
Sunoo, halfway to pinning the swatch card to the mirror, froze. He studied you the way he reads a room before a cue, then came back with both hands visible, as if approaching something skittish.
“Hey.” Not a question. “Step out with me?”
He drew you two feet toward the doorway, far enough for the hall window’s light to touch your face. He didn’t crowd; he left you space.
“Name five things you can see,” he said, voice calm in that deliberate way of someone who’d learned steadiness as a skill.
You shot him a look, then complied. “Tape line. Your shoelace. Banner mockup. That smug mannequin. The… recycling tower of glory.”
“Three things you can touch.”
You tapped the cold edge of the table, brushed your toe against the scuffed floor, pressed the knit between your fingers. “Table. Floor. Fabric.”
“Two things you did,” he prompted, gentler now.
The answers came quicker than expected. “Cleared a room we weren’t supposed to have. Built a team for the showcase.”
“One thing you don’t have to carry alone.”
You met his eyes. He didn’t look away.
“This,” you said at last. “This entire this.”
Somewhere in Studio B, Heeseung struck the brushed cymbal—the signal you’d all agreed meant hush. It shimmered through the air, then vanished. At last, your breath slid through that too-small needle.
Sunoo’s shoulders dropped, like a note resolving. He leaned against the doorframe so you didn’t have to face the room alone. “You keep thinking you tricked everyone with color coding and a label maker,” he said. “But you didn’t glamour this into being, Y/N. You spreadsheeted it. You wrote the memo that made a principal say yes. You built a space where kids can walk in and not shrink.”
Your mouth twitched. “You pitched process paths. You asked for storage in a room with capital letters on the door.”
“I would’ve pitched into a vacuum,” he said. “You turned the vacuum into a workshop.” His eyes flicked to your hands. “Also, you’re holding Ni-Ki’s exact fabric, and if you don’t hand it over, he will storm in like a raccoon.”
Right on cue, Ni-Ki’s shout rattled down the hall. “WHERE IS MY GRAPHITE.”
Sunoo didn’t even flinch, just smirked. “He’s fine,” he murmured, then lowered his voice. “Hey. You remember that girl at the open house? The one half-hidden behind her mom? She’s back tomorrow. Jay slotted her on the volunteer list. She wrote ‘loom demos’ under interests.”
The tight band around your ribs… eased. Not gone, but lighter.
“I’ll be there,” you said.
“I know,” he answered. “Because you built the place you needed as a kid—and left the door open.”
He dug into his pocket and pulled out something small—you knew what it was before you fully saw it: a safety pin, touched with the faintest veil of gold leaf. Barely there, but it caught the light like a secret.
“For your apron,” he said. “So you remember you can pin things in place before you sew them down.”
You exhaled a laugh that didn’t snag on the way out. “That’s corny.”
“Disgustingly,” he agreed. “And I stand by it.”
You let him fasten it just above your heart. The metal was cool; the gold was somehow both nothing and everything.
From the hall came the skitter of Jo’s sneakers and the sharp clack of Heejin’s clipboard. You could already hear him declaring, “I sorted the tassels by vibe!” and Heejin replying that “vibe is not a category”—while labeling a bin with the word anyway.
You straightened, shook your shoulders loose, and lifted the graphite knit. “All right. Victory goblin’s feast.”
“Famished,” you said, carrying the fabric to Ni-Ki’s table just as he prowled in, hair in deliberate disarray, pencil behind one ear like a blade.
“Finally,” he breathed, pouncing on the bolt. Then he paused, glanced up, and squinted. “You okay?”
“Define okay,” you said.
Sunoo answered without looking away from the swatch card. “She remembered she’s in charge.”
Ni-Ki grunted, appeased. “Good. Because Sunghoon just texted a photo of the block and I think the cold room’s falling in love with the ice.”
“We’ll flirt back with geometry,” you said—half a joke, almost not.
Sunoo bumped your shoulder, light as a bell. “There she is.”
He braced the door for the next wave of chaos—Heeseung arriving with a cable coil slung like a halo, Jo triumphant with a bag of zip ties, Heejin brandishing an outlet map like a battle flag. The glamour on the bins still shimmered, absurd and perfect.
You pressed the gold-touched safety pin once beneath your finger, a promise you didn’t voice. Then you lifted your chin, set your hands to the cloth, and let the afternoon fall into the rhythm you knew by heart.
The morning air still carries a bite when the shuttle doors sigh open. You and Sunoo step down, coffees in hand, a paper bag of emergency snacks—rule zero, faithfully observed. Campus gleams scrubbed and expectant: banners clipped to railings, cables tucked under bright tape, volunteers in lanyards drifting across the quad like purposeful birds.
Without a word, Sunoo reaches over and straightens the gold-leaf pin on your apron. The simple touch steadies your breath. “Ready?” he asks.
“Ready,” you answer—and mostly mean it.
Rounding the arts building, you nearly collide with Jungwon, stationed like a checkpoint, clipboard tucked under one arm, ‘JUDGE’ lanyard flashing. The lab goggles you teased him about last week are very real, perched on his head like a crown of transparent hubris.
He sweeps his gaze over the two of you, smirk sharp. “Confirmed: lab goggles are a look,” he declares. “Also, commuting together? Bold move for people supposedly dodging rumors.”
Sunoo dips a fraction of a bow, perfectly deadpan. “We’ve embraced our fate.”
“Dangerous word to use around me,” Jungwon replies, tapping the goggles. “OSHA has clauses about Moirai proximity.” His eyes catch on the gold pin at your chest, then the twin coffee cups—your name scrawled on one, Gold Leaf on the other—and his smirk softens into something closer to approval. “You two look… ready for anything. I hate when that happens before I’ve had the fun of judging.”
“You’re welcome to critique our outlet map,” you offer, brandishing the clipboard Heejin had decorated with nocturnal-animal stickers. “Or the snack table. Extremely judgable.”
He leans in, skimming the notes, and can’t quite hide his surprise. “Huh. Process paths. Shadow laurel. Essence. Look at you making me redundant.”
Then he rocks back, lowering his goggles with full theatrical gravitas. “Unofficial briefing: your atrium demo got bumped to 10:30. Facilities finished the window clean. More traffic, better light. Don’t waste it.”
“Copy,” you say, adrenaline sparking in the best way. “We’ll starve the gold and feed the kids.”
Jungwon pushes his goggles back up, satisfied. “Do that. And… hey.” He sketches a lazy figure-eight between you and Sunoo. “Whatever this is? Keep it out of the score—keep it in the work.” He winks, irrepressible. “Fate loves an overconfident subplot.”
Sunoo presses a hand to his chest. “We only do confident snacks.”
“Tragic,” Jungwon declares, grinning as he drifts away. “Break a leg. Just not the ice sculpture—Sunghoon threatened me.”
He vanishes into the volunteer stream, leaving behind the faint scent of marker and inevitability.
You and Sunoo exchange a look that says the same thing from opposite angles: okay, go time.
“10:30,” he mutters, already firing off texts to Heeseung and Ni-Ki. “I’ll sweep the process path. You grab Jo and Heejin, open the atrium.”
“Silk if anything goes sideways,” you remind him, lifting your coffee.
He clinks his cup against yours. “No shrinking.”
“No trophies,” you finish. And together, you step forward—your steps—to where the day is waiting.
The day unwound like a pulled thread—tight, fast, deliberate. You ricocheted between stations: checking the outlet map, passing Heejin a fresh stack of waivers, rescuing Jo from the label maker (twice), and delivering iced coffees across the quad to Sunghoon’s ice crew.
“Bless you,” Sunghoon said, taking his cup like it was sacrament. A nearby volunteer raised theirs in damp gratitude; behind them, the ice block loomed, chalk arcs already traced across its cold-room sheen.
You pivoted to sprint back toward the atrium—only to feel a tug at the hem of your shirt.
Turning, you found her. The girl from the tour—the one who’d hidden half-behind her mother. Today, she stood alone, carrying a bright, careful kind of courage. Dark hair pulled back, canvas tote on her shoulder, her mouth set with nerves that couldn’t quite dim the spark in her eyes.
“Hi,” she said, voice catching. “Um. I don’t know if you remember me.”
“I do,” you said, warmth arriving before the words. “Hi. I’m Y/N.”
“Haseul,” she offered quickly, then blurted, “My mom spoke to you. In the textile room. About… my lineage.”
“I remember,” you said again, softer.
She glanced past you at the bustle, then back again, fingers worrying the strap of her tote. “I—uh—I’m from Ariadne’s line. People always make these pity faces when I say that, like I’m a story everyone already knows ends badly.” Her mouth tilted, not quite a smile. “My dad left when I was little, so it kind of… stuck. Pitiful labyrinth girl.” She rolled her eyes, brittle at the edges. “Kids used to say I’d never find my way anywhere without someone else holding the thread.”
Something in your chest pulled tight, then eased. “I’m sorry,” you said—and meant it like kinship.
Haseul drew a breath that looked splintered. “My mom told me what you said. About looking out for people who get… talked about. And, um—can I join the Textiles for Youth club? I make dumb little bracelets out of floss, I tried macramé off YouTube, and I’m not afraid of knots.” She darted you a hopeful look. “Also I brought snacks? If that’s, like… initiation?”
You laughed, the real kind, and watched her shoulders drop a fraction. “Rule zero is snacks. You’re already fluent.” You tipped your head. “And Ariadne isn’t a sad ending to me. She’s the reason anyone gets out. She mapped the mess. That’s not pitiful—that’s brilliant.”
Haseul’s eyes went glossy, then stubborn against it. “I used to draw mazes in the margins of my math homework. Got in trouble for wasting time.”
“Sounds like practice to me,” you said. “Want to try our traveling loom demo later? It’s mini—you thread it, pick a path, decide what meets and what doesn’t.”
She nodded so eagerly her tote gave a thump. “Yes. Please. Also—uh—my mom said I could volunteer today if you needed? I’m really good at telling little kids not to eat paint.”
“Well then,” you said, tugging a spare lanyard from your apron pocket like a magician’s reveal, “welcome to the team.” You slipped it over her head. “Two assignments: greet people at the atrium and point them along the process path. If anyone says ‘pitiful,’ you tell them ‘pathfinder’—then send them straight to me.”
Haseul’s grin flickered, then returned steadier. “Pathfinder,” she echoed, like the word gave her somewhere to stand.
Across the atrium, you spotted Sunoo with a clipboard. He’d clearly noticed—his expression softened into that private smile that never asked you to be smaller. He tipped his chin in a quiet salute, then turned to wrangle a delivery cart, leaving the moment untouched for you and Haseul.
You crouched to her eye level, voice lowering until the background noise blurred. “Here’s the secret,” you said. “Threads don’t just tie things off. They connect. If you ever feel lost, come find me. If I’m not there, find Sunoo, or Jo, or Heejin. We’ll hand you a thread—or follow yours.”
Haseul’s fingers closed around the badge on her lanyard, holding it tight. “Okay.”
“Okay,” you echoed. You stood, offered your palm. She met it with a tentative smack that landed solid.
“Station’s this way,” you said, heading toward the atrium. Haseul kept pace, a small bounce sneaking into her stride.
Behind you, the festival moved like a living loom: Heeseung’s hush-bell shimmered through a soundcheck, Ni-Ki bent rolls of fabric into organic shapes that seemed to bloom on command, and Sunghoon’s crew wheeled in a fresh pan of crushed ice glittering like stars. The familiar tug of morning fear brushed your ribs, but you met it the way Sunoo had taught you—five things, three things, two, one—and it eased.
At the atrium threshold, you set down a bowl of mint-pistachio popcorn on the greeting table—rule zero, honored—and passed Haseul a stack of schedule cards. “Pathfinders first,” you told her.
She nodded, straightened her shoulders, and faced the incoming crowd with a clear voice. “Welcome! Process path starts here—follow the little gold dots. If you get lost, I’ve got you.”
You stepped back, let her own the space, and caught Sunoo’s eyes across the way. He didn’t wave—just smiled, as if gravity itself were falling exactly where you’d meant it to.
The afternoon unraveled faster than you’d braced for. You ping-ponged between the atrium and Studio B—answering questions, swapping out dulled rotary blades, rescuing a toddler’s shirt from a stamp-pad disaster (Heejin: “We can call it avant-ink.” Jo: “We can call her mom.”).
Sunghoon’s crew whooped as the ribbon plane on Essence finally read from twenty feet, enough to make strangers pause and tilt their heads. Heeseung ghosted through with headset and thermos, dropping his “hush bell” between songs so gently only crew noticed. Ni-Ki, refusing to look pleased, pronounced the chevron seam “acceptable for public consumption” and lobbed you a bobbin like a bouquet.
Between errands, you slipped outside to check the med tent—a neat white square pitched just beyond the atrium doors. A sandwich board read: FIRST AID / WATER / FEELINGS in Heejin’s handwriting. Inside: a folding cot, two coolers, a tower of paper cups… and a lanky boy in navy scrubs hunched over a laptop, lips moving around multiple-choice answers like spells.
He glanced up, blinked, and grinned with the wattage of a Victorian child surviving on vibes. “Y/N? Hi! Heejin’s second cousin, Sim Jaeyun—most people call me Jake. Paramedics student, certified in band-aids and morale. Also currently taking a quiz worth fifteen percent while hydrated.”
You laughed. “Multitasking under pressure. You’ll fit right in.”
He gestured at a box of granola bars like a solemn oath. “Take one—it’s union rules.” Then, without missing a beat: “So, have the couple decided if they’re entering Best Leadership after the showcase on Wednesday?”
You blinked. “Which couple?”
Jake tipped his chin toward the atrium, where Sunoo was mid-demonstration, guiding a kid along the gold dots of the process path. Jake raised two fingers, shaped them into a tiny heart. “Those two.”
Heat threatened your face; you told it to wait its turn. “We are not—”
“—officially announcing a nomination, got it. So modest. So shy,” Jake cut in, clicking to his next quiz question as if he hadn’t just lobbed a grenade. “As a medical professional, I’m only asking so I can monitor elevated heart rates.”
Your lips pressed together, but the laugh escaped as a snort. “We’re monitoring outlets and waiver forms.”
“Hot,” Jake said gravely. He tapped his pen toward your chest. “Gold pin? Excellent symbolism. Judges eat that up.”
“Is everyone in your family like this?” you asked, deadpan.
“Unstoppably charming? Correct.” He squinted at his laptop. “Quick ethics hypo: a guy staggers in with glitter in his eyes and a bruised ego. Do you A) flush the glitter, B) patch the ego, C) both A and B, or D) ask if the glitter is biodegradable?”
“C,” you said. “Always C.”
“Correct,” Jake said, typing. “Follow-up: if two leaders are clearly co-piloting a miracle on caffeine and sheer willpower, do you A) mind your business, B) heckle, C) nominate them for Best Leadership, or D) make sure they drink water first?”
“D,” you said. “Then A. Maybe B if I’m generous.”
Jake waggled his eyebrows. “Logged. Also, FYI—a judge in lab goggles stopped by to ‘assess first aid readiness’ and asked if we stocked tissues for ‘narrative-induced crying.’ I told him yes.”
“Jungwon,” you muttered. “Clipboard as weapon.”
“Intimidating aura,” Jake agreed brightly. “Anyway—Heejin claims you’re the reason my beloved second cousin stopped complaining about an ‘Aphroditic gravity hazard’ and started labeling bins by vibe.” His head tilted, expression softening. “That’s leadership. Trophies or no trophies.”
You glanced toward the tent flap, sunlight stitching a bright hem across the canvas. “We don’t do trophies.”
“We do gravity on purpose,” he said easily, like he’d already been briefed. “And we pack electrolyte powder.” He tossed you two packets. “For later. You strike me as the type who forgets to drink water until the loom starts singing.”
“Rude. True.” You pocketed them. “Thanks, Jake.”
He saluted with a tongue depressor. “Silk if anything goes wrong. Otherwise, bring me gossip and candy wrappers so I don’t feel left out.”
“Deal.” You hesitated, then added, “And… thanks for being here.”
“Pizza and prestige,” he grinned. “I’m a simple man.”
You stepped back into the day, lighter than when you’d entered. Sunoo was already moving toward you, chalk smeared on his sleeve, headset crooked, exactly where you needed him to be.
“Med tent check?” he asked.
“Stocked with granola, feelings, and a menace named Jake,” you said. “He’s attempting to enroll us in Best Leadership.”
Sunoo made a thoughtful face. “Can you win and refuse the trophy?”
“We can make them turn it into a shelf,” you said. “For storage.”
He laughed, bright and quick, then tipped his head toward the atrium. “Haseul just walked a family through the process path like she invented it. Jo cried twice. Heejin pretended to have dust in her eye.”
You followed his glance. Haseul stood at the first station, explaining seam samples to a boy who couldn’t stop touching the zig-zag. Her lanyard looked like it had always been there.
“How are you?” Sunoo asked, quiet enough that the noise around you fell away.
You looked at him—the chalk, the headset, the eyes that steadied. “Threaded,” you said. “And you?”
“Weaved,” he said, and somehow it wasn’t ridiculous.
A volunteer jogged up—“We’re running low on safety pins!”—and you both moved at once, the unspoken choreography of a day you’d built.
Somewhere, Heeseung brushed a cymbal into a swell that made the atrium sound like it was breathing. Sunghoon’s ice caught the late sun and scattered it like benediction. Ni-Ki swore at a bobbin and, predictably, triumphed.
You hit stride. Questions came; answers followed. Kids stamped hands; you wiped them clean. Jay swept through with a revised map and a thumbs-up. The storage room smelled less like lost ambitions, more like possibility.
Later—after one more iced coffee run, after a dozen small rescues and the kind of laughter that shakes old beliefs loose—you caught sight of the med tent again. Jake was high-fiving a pint-sized volunteer before returning to his laptop. Pizza and prestige, you thought, absurdly, and laughed out loud.
Sunoo glanced over, smiling simply because you were.
“Ready for Wednesday?” he asked.
“Ready to starve the gold and feed the crowd,” you said. And then, because it finally felt true enough to name: “Ready to be seen, not just looked at.”
His smile softened. “Then let’s give them something worth seeing.”
Tuesday blurred by on Monday’s rhythm—and suddenly, it was Wednesday. You shouldered into Studio B, coffee in one hand, iPad in the other, just in time to hear Ni-Ki’s voice ricochet off the walls.
“What the FUCK do you mean Eunice and Minhyuk can’t model?! It’s literally showcase day!”
Your coffee nearly sloshed over. His tone could’ve stripped paint. He pressed his phone to his ear like it owed him rent.
“If you can’t pull models for my victory line, how the hell am I supposed to show school spirit?! Me? Model? Absolutely the fuck not, Jay.”
He ended the call with a murderous tap, raked both hands through his hair, and muttered in Japanese like a man hexed. When his eyes finally landed on you—frozen mid-sip, clutching your coffee like a talisman—your stomach sank.
He dropped onto a rolling stool, head in hands. “I need two models. One male. One female. Right now.”
You winced. “Oh… wow… uh… good luck with that.”
Ni-Ki’s head snapped up. His eyes narrowed. You knew that look. You hated that look.
“Y/N.”
“No.”
“You didn’t even let me—”
“No.”
“C’mon, it’s not—”
“Ni-Ki, no!” You backed up, waving your hands like that would erase you from the roster of possible candidates. “I don’t model. I don’t… compete. I don’t do the spotlight. My family would literally—” You snapped your mouth shut, but the words tumbled out anyway. “They told me since I was little that if I ever chased the spotlight, I’d feel the karmic debt heavier than anyone else. And guess what? I’m a descendant of Arachne, Ni-Ki. Arachne. Bad things happen when I try.”
You clutched your iPad like a shield. Your pulse thundered. You weren’t about to let a runway curse be the reason your family dragged you in the group chat for the next twenty years.
For once, Ni-Ki was speechless. He looked like a man about to cry over a broken Lego set.
“...Y/N. Please. You’re literally right here.”
“I said no!”
Silence dropped like an anvil. Then came the softest interruption—calm, airy, and unexpected.
“I’ll do it.”
Both your heads whipped toward the door. Sunoo stood there, freshly arrived in a baby-blue linen blouse and denim pants, pulling an AirPod from his ear like this was the most casual thing in the world. He’d been watching the entire meltdown, expression unreadable.
“What,” you breathed.
Sunoo met your wide-eyed stare, then tilted his head just slightly. “Rule number three: no shrinking. We have a friend in need of dire help, so what’s wrong with a little spotlight?”
You gaped. Of all people, Sunoo—the one who never asked for attention but somehow owned every room—was the one volunteering.
“Wha—wait—you’re serious? You?” you stammered.
Ni-Ki bolted upright, hands clasped like a preacher who’d just seen salvation. “THANK YOU. Oh my god. Sunoo, you’re my savior.”
Your jaw dropped. “You can’t just—Sunoo, do you understand what you’re signing up for? Angry goddesses. Family curses. Arachnophobia!”
He smiled faintly, calm as ever. “If any angry goddess shows up, I’ll handle it. Athena’s practically my distant aunt anyway. She won’t lay a hand on you—not when I’m here.”
You blinked. Twice. The iPad slid down from your face. Sunoo wasn’t joking.
Meanwhile, Ni-Ki was already on his knees, arms raised to the heavens. “THANK YOU, SUNOO. You’re my divine intervention. My holy grail. My—”
“Okay, stop,” you muttered, face hot. But your eyes flicked back to Sunoo. He was watching you, steady, grounded. For the first time, the spotlight didn’t feel like a death sentence. Not with him there.
Your mouth opened, then closed. You pressed your lips together, staring between Sunoo’s grounded gaze and Ni-Ki’s borderline manic one. Finally, with a long groan, you caved.
“Fine. Fine. But two conditions.”
Ni-Ki nearly toppled off his stool. “Name them, my star, my savior, my—”
“Stop.” You held up a finger. “Number one: I don’t want to be compared to any divine being. I’m not a goddess, not a muse, not an otherworldly weaver of destiny. None of that. I’m just me, standing in borrowed clothes for ten to fifteen minutes. Got it?”
Ni-Ki nodded furiously. “Got it. You’re just you. Absolutely mortal. Practically basic.”
“...You didn’t have to go that far.”
“Sorry. Continue.”
You raised a second finger. “Number two: my face does not show up on the school’s social media thumbnails. No profile banners, no pinned TikToks, no ‘Meet Our Surprise Model!’ reels. If I see my forehead on the Instagram grid, I’m pulling the plug. Immediately.”
“DEAL.” Ni-Ki clapped his hands together so hard the sound echoed. “A million percent, deal. You’ll be invisible online. I’ll censor your face like it’s FBI evidence if I have to.”
You stared at him for a beat. “...That’s disturbing. But acceptable.”
“YES!” He snatched his phone, thumb already smashing the speed dial. “Jay! Update! We’re saved! I’ve got two models. Yes, two. No, not me. Guess who?!”
While Ni-Ki cackled into the phone, you rubbed your temples. Sunoo, calm as ever, adjusted the cuff of his blouse like he hadn’t just volunteered for divine wrath.
With the deal struck, Ni-Ki hung up, practically vibrating with relief. “Alright, you two, come with me. Measurements, fittings, adjustments—we’ve got a couple hours before your panel talk and showcase in the evening.”
You glanced at the clock on the studio wall. 11:43 a.m.
Sunoo looked at you, then at Ni-Ki already marching ahead. “Well,” he said simply, “no shrinking.”
You sighed, clutching your coffee like it could erase reality. “If I survive this, you’re buying me dinner.”
Sunoo smiled faintly. “Deal.”
Together, the three of you disappeared deeper into the studio—duties officially handed off to Heejin and Jake, and a long afternoon of frantic measuring and pinning waiting ahead.
The fitting room swallowed you whole: bolts of fabric stacked like skyscrapers, a pin-cushion tomato glaring from a wrist, tailor’s chalk hanging in the air like celebratory dust. Ni-Ki stormed in first, tape measure looped around his neck like a doctor’s stethoscope.
“Shoes off, posture up, dignity optional,” he declared, snapping the tape so it zinged. “Sunoo, you’re second. Y/N, you’re up.”
“I hate this,” you muttered, climbing onto the low platform.
“You’ll hate it stylishly,” Ni-Ki countered, crouching to measure your ankle. “Ankle: delicate. Calf: surprising. Thigh: iconic. Don’t twitch—pins bite.”
You twitched anyway when he circled your waist.
“Stop breathing like a haunted accordion. Normal breaths. You’re not fleeing an oracle.”
“No divine comparisons,” you warned.
“Right, right—no divine comparisons,” he echoed, then squinted at the tape. “Waist noted. Hips—Sunoo, quit smirking.”
“I’m not smirking,” Sunoo said, absolutely smirking. He lounged on a stool, legs crossed, serene as a cat. “Chin up, shoulders down. Pretend you’re announcing to the world you invented pockets.”
You rolled your eyes but complied. Ni-Ki hummed, jotting numbers. “Bust—don’t yelp, I’m a professional. Arms out. Like a T. Less seaweed, more windmill.”
“Why are all your instructions edible?”
“Because fashion is delicious,” Ni-Ki deadpanned, flicking chalk along a muslin bodice. “Now turn. Not a dad-parking-the-car turn—a model turn.”
Sunoo snorted. “Left foot a little ahead. Yes, like that.”
Ni-Ki pinned a seam, then gasped theatrically as a single pin hit the floor. “We do not lose pins on fitting day. That’s how shows end in blood.”
“Drama queen,” you muttered.
“Drama emperor,” he corrected. “Arms down. Perfect. Now, ground rules: no divine metaphors, no thumbnails. I’ll pixelate your face myself, witness-protection style.”
“You’re not joking?” you asked.
“I have the app,” he replied solemnly, sliding the muslin over your head. “Base fit’s clean. I’m seeing a structural skirt, slit detail, asymmetrical belt, bonded seams. School spirit, but not tacky.”
Sunoo tapped his chin. “What about a ribbon detail that echoes a victory laurel—”
“No goddesses,” you and Ni-Ki said in unison.
“—that echoes a track ribbon,” Sunoo amended smoothly. “Movement without myth.”
Ni-Ki lit up. “Yes. Movement. Velocity. On Sunoo, we echo it in the collar line—like wind slicing water.”
“Flattering,” Sunoo muttered, already slipping off the stool as Ni-Ki shoved a shirt at him.
“Your turn,” you said, relieved.
Sunoo peeled down to a tank without ceremony. Ni-Ki whipped out the tape measure like a lasso.
“Haiku by accident,” Ni-Ki murmured, running the tape down Sunoo’s arm. “Shoulder to wrist: runway-ready. Torso length… crop the jacket half an inch. Sunoo, mock neck tolerable?”
“Will tolerating a mock neck stop an angry goddess?” Sunoo asked mildly.
Ni-Ki paused, then shrugged. “If you look good enough, maybe.”
You laughed despite yourself. “No thumbnails.”
“NO thumbnails,” he vowed, pinning the shoulder seam. “Okay—Sunoo, walk to the door and back.”
Sunoo glided like he’d been born to float, every step a quiet flex. You watched, surprised by how effortless it looked. “See?” he said, returning. “It’s just walking. With rhythm.”
“With a thousand eyeballs,” you countered.
“Then imagine they’re sewing needles,” he said gently. “You’ve handled sharper things.”
Ni-Ki, still crouched, glanced up. Something in his face gentled. “He’s right. You can do this.”
You tipped your head. “You sound like you’ve fought the spotlight yourself.”
He rose, brushing chalk from his palms. “I grew up above my grandma’s costume shop in Osaka,” he said—still quick, but quieter now. “Summer heat, one squeaky ceiling fan, a sewing machine that roared like a motorcycle. Every festival, every school play—if something tore five minutes before curtain, we fixed it. No time for panic. My grandma had one rule: ‘Finish the hem, then cry.’” His smile tilted, crooked but fond. “So we finished a lot of hems.”
You pictured little Ni-Ki threading a needle with stubby fingers and swallowed. “And if you couldn’t fix it?”
He winked. “We made it look intentional."
Sunoo gave a sage nod. “Runway philosophy.”
“Life philosophy,” Ni-Ki countered, pinning your hem with sniper precision. “Alright—walking drill. Y/N, off the platform. Let’s find your rhythm.”
You stepped down, clumsy at first. Sunoo moved beside you. “Count in fours,” he murmured. “One, two, three, glide. Shoulders soft, ribs steady. Spine like a zipper—tall, not tense.”
Ni-Ki clapped the beat, overly dramatic. “ONE two three glide! Less duck, more swan! No myth, no animal—just… you.”
“Extremely helpful,” you deadpanned, though your steps began to sync. Sunoo’s elbow brushed yours—grounding, not showy.
“Again,” he said quietly. “Rule number three.”
You echoed it back, softer this time. “No shrinking.”
Ni-Ki jogged backward, studying your line. “Yes—perfect. That’s the silhouette. Sunoo, pivot with her on four—beautiful. Now freeze like you’ve just been told a secret. Don’t smile. Hold it in your eyes.”
You tried. The room stayed steady. No thunderbolts, no goddess dropping out of the HVAC.
Sunoo leaned in, mock-serious. “See? No smiting.”
“Yet,” you muttered, but the panic had softened.
Ni-Ki darted forward with the real fabric: the slit skirt, the fitted top, an asymmetrical belt that cinched clean. For Sunoo, a cropped jacket, mock neck, trousers that stretched his already unfair proportions.
He stepped back, exhaled—and for once, went still. “There,” he murmured, more to himself than you. “Victory line. Not because we win. Because we didn’t quit.”
Sunoo glanced at you. “Lunch after. My treat.”
“Dinner,” you countered, smoothing the belt. “I’m upping the stakes.”
“Done.”
Ni-Ki’s phone buzzed. He answered on speaker, herding you both toward the mirror. “Jay? Measurements complete, adjustments in progress. On schedule. No, not thumbnails—don’t start. Yes, it’s 11:43—no, now 12:48. We’ll steam, style, rehearse by three. Trust me.”
He hung up, turned, and flashed a grin bright as sunrise. “Alright, team. Steamer’s hot, irons ready. Three hours. Finish the hem, then cry.”
In the mirror, you met your own gaze—still you. Not goddess, not curse. Just… you. A little taller.
Sunoo brushed your shoulder. “No shrinking.”
You breathed it back. “No shrinking.”
“Perfect,” Ni-Ki said, snapping the tape measure like a starting gun. “Let’s win this.”
You and Sunoo stepped out of the fitting room in near-military sync—brisk strides, pins safely gone, hems brushing your ankles, the faint ghost of steam and starch still clinging to the fabric. Ni-Ki veered off toward the styling racks, already conducting his volunteer army of steamers and lint-rollers like a general with too much caffeine.
You and Sunoo cut across the atrium to the runway zone, where a ring of folding chairs surrounded the platform. Jungwon sat dead center with a clipboard—responsibility incarnate, if responsibility wore a hoodie and AirPods. Two other student-judges flanked him, highlighting chaos with multiple neon colors, as if rainbow ink could tame it.
Jungwon spotted you instantly. A grin spread slow and wide. “Well, well. Look who just unlocked a side quest.”
You narrowed your eyes. “If the side quest is ‘don’t pass out in front of parents,’ I’m already channeling Steve Irwin.”
He flipped his clipboard around. “Wrong. I meant the Best Leadership Contest.” He said it with capital letters and the weight of a theme song.
You blinked. “The what.”
“Best Leadership. Pre-panel awards. Happens at five. Basically a corgi show for people who herd disasters.”
Sunoo’s mouth curved. “Accurate.”
“I—no—nobody submitted me,” you stammered, already feeling your soul float two inches out of your body.
Jungwon tapped the form with his pen. “Weird. This sheet says: Y/N L/N (Textiles for Youth) + Kim Sunoo (Fashion Dept) — joint leadership candidacy. Look—bullet points.” He waggled his brows. “And a whole paragraph.”
Your head whipped toward Sunoo. “You?!”
Sunoo shook his head, unbothered. “I don’t write essays.”
Jungwon leaned back, smug. “It was Heejin and Jake.”
You gawked. “Heejin and Jake submitted us?!”
“Mm-hmm,” Jungwon sing-songed, deadpan. “Apparently you two ‘demonstrate crisis triage, collaborative adaptability, and community spirit under high-pressure constraints.’ And then, underlined: ‘They also feed the volunteers.’”
“That part is fair,” Sunoo said. “We do feed people.”
You pressed your fingers to your temples. “I have a panel at 5:30, a showcase at 7, and now—what—an awards thing before all that?”
“Relax,” Jungwon said, utterly unhelpful. “They announce finalists at five, quick blurbs, tiny applause, one photo, no fire hoops. You’ll be fine.”
You pointed at him. “No thumbnails. Tell your media crew.”
Jungwon didn’t even look up. “Already flagged. Pixelation protocol activated. Your face is safe, Witness Protection.”
Sunoo gave you a sideways look. “See? Systems.”
You exhaled. “I swear I’m haunting Heejin and Jake if I win anything.”
“Promises, promises,” Jungwon said, and then—because he’s Jungwon—“By the way, your panel moderator asked if you could tease a ‘sneak peek’ of the textile mentoring program. Keep it to two minutes. No mythological references.”
“I’m surrounded by men who study my triggers,” you muttered.
Sunoo’s elbow nudged yours. “We’ll keep it simple. No shrinking.”
“Right,” you said, steadier. “No shrinking.”
One of the other judges peeked up. “Quick runway check? We’re timing practice walks while the lighting crew finishes calibrations.”
Sunoo answered for both of you: “We’re ready.”
You weren’t sure you were, but his voice folded over the moment like a blanket. The two of you stepped closer to the platform as Jungwon scribbled another note.
“Oh, and Y/N?” he added, eyes bright with mischief. “If you win Best Leadership, I’m putting a tiny paper crown on you for exactly five seconds.”
“No crowns,” you said automatically.
“Paper tiara?”
“Yang Jungwon.”
“Three seconds.”
Sunoo, traitorously helpful, said, “Two.”
Jungwon slapped the clipboard shut. “Deal. Alright—places! We’ve got a leader to crown and a runway to conquer before dinner.”
You shot Sunoo a look. He just smiled, easy and sure, and offered his hand to help you up onto the platform.
“Two minutes to learn the turns,” he murmured. “A lifetime to forget the thumbnails.”
You snorted, took his hand, and stepped into the light.
4:45 p.m.—a quarter to five.
You and Sunoo cut across the quad toward the outdoor stage, the late-afternoon sun turning the lawn into a glittering grid of folding chairs. Banners snapped in the breeze. A mic screeched. Somewhere, a freshman tripped over a cable and apologized to the cable.
At the aisle, Heejin reigned like a field marshal—headset askew, clipboard tucked under one arm, finger-gunning families into order with terrifying precision.
“Families to the left, students to the right—no, your right—sir, the stroller parks by the hydrangeas—Y/N!” Her face lit when she spotted you. “Perfect. You and Sunoo: Row B, center. If they call your names, take the side ramp, not the stairs. The stairs squeak like a haunted harmonica.”
“You submitted us,” you said flatly.
Heejin blinked, pure innocence. “Allegedly.”
Sunoo folded his hands in a graceful bow. “Thank you for the nomination.”
“See?” Heejin gestured to him like he was an exhibit. “Grace. Poise. Gratitude. Meanwhile, Y/N, unclench your jaw before you sprain it.”
“I have a panel at 5:30, a showcase at 7, and now an award at 5,” you said. “My jaw is working overtime.”
“Good,” Heejin said, already corralling a cluster of parents to an open row. “Use that energy. If you win, you’ll smile with your eyes—remember the thumbnail embargo.”
“No thumbnails,” you warned.
“Cross-my-heart-and-sue-me,” she replied, then swiveled. “Jake! Row markers need shifting—these folks want shade, not melanoma.”
Jake appeared like a stagehand summoned by name, arms full of laminated signs. He gave you a conspiratorial thumbs-up. “Break a leg. Not literally. Insurance paperwork is a beast.”
“You both are menaces,” you muttered.
“Effective menaces,” Jake corrected, jogging off.
Sunoo’s shoulder brushed yours, steady. “Row B?” he prompted.
You let him steer you down the center aisle. The stage ahead wore a neat line of potted plants like a polite smile. A student tested the microphone again—kehhhhh—then whispered, “Test test… Best Leadership… don’t panic…”
From behind you, Heejin’s voice sailed over the crowd: “Panicking is for after the event! Hydrate now, De-hydrate later!”
You sank into your seats, exhaling. Sunoo set his program on his lap, scanning the order.
“Finalists announced, finalist’s speech, tiny applause,” he summarized. “Then your panel. Then showcase and dinner.”
You side-eyed him. “You skipped the part where I combust.”
He tilted his head, amused. “Schedule doesn’t list combustion.”
“Typical,” you said, but the corner of your mouth betrayed you.
Two rows up, Jungwon swivelled in his chair with a smirk, holding up a comically small paper crown between two fingers like a threat. You glared. He blew you a very responsible kiss and faced forward.
Heejin slid into the aisle beside you just long enough to squeeze your shoulder. “For what it’s worth,” she said, softer now, “you deserve to be seen for how you lead—even if we keep it off thumbnails.”
Your throat did a weird warm twist. “Allegedly.”
She grinned, already backing away. “Allegedly. Places! We’re starting in two!”
Sunoo leaned in, voice a quiet string across the noise. “Rule number three.”
You let the breath go. “No shrinking.”
“Exactly.” He leaned back, hands folded, the sun sketching a silver edge along his profile. The emcee stepped to the mic; the crowd hushed; a banner snapped once in the breeze.
Behind the stage, Ni-Ki was audibly waging war with a runaway steamer. The whole moment felt absurdly alive.
You slid your nerves neatly under the chair, squared your shoulders, and fixed your eyes on the ramp Heejin had flagged.
“Alright,” you murmured—to yourself, and to the part of you still ducking from spotlights. “Let’s go be human, and be good at it.”
At 4:59 p.m, The emcee stepped to the mic, the quad settling into a bright, breezy hush.
“Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining us at the Spring Showcase pre-ceremony! Today we’re recognizing something that makes this campus actually run on time—no, not coffee—leadership. The Best Leadership Contest highlights student pairs who turned chaos into choreography, who built community under pressure, and who did it with grace, grit, and zero singed eyebrows. Mostly.”
A ripple of laughter. The emcee flipped a card.
“This year, we had five fantastic pairs from across campus. Shoutout to all finalists:
Environmental Sciences × Campus Gardens
Engineering × Robotics Club
Performing Arts × Stage Management Guild
Fashion Department × Textile for Youths Club
Business Administration × Community Outreach
“And now—your top three.”
You felt Sunoo’s fingers lace with yours under the program. Warm. Steady.
“In third place: Performing Arts and the Stage Management Guild; Lee Yechan and Noelle Khoo—for turning a blackout into a seamless candlelit interlude. That was not in the script, and yet—chef’s kiss.” Applause, whoops, a tiny flashlight wave.
“In second place: Engineering and the Robotics Club; Wesley Hernandez and Cherry Li—for rebuilding a sabotaged drivetrain in forty minutes using a paperclip, an Allen key, and a prayer.” Louder applause. Someone held up a wrench like a victory torch.
A tiny breath caught in your throat. Sunoo’s thumb pressed once against your knuckles: here.“And in first place—for crisis triage, volunteer care, and the kind of collaboration that makes today’s showcase day possible—from the Fashion Department and the Textile for Youths Club: Kim Sunoo and Y/N L/N!”
The quad erupted—cheers, applause, and Ni-Ki’s unmistakable whoop cutting through it all. You shot to your feet on instinct—then faltered. Sunoo rose with you, his grip firm, giving a gentle tug.
“Ramp. And remember—rule number three,” he murmured.
You moved. Step by step, Sunoo kept just inside your orbit, matching your pace, his hand in yours a quiet promise. The breeze toyed with the stage banner; your pulse thudded in your palms. And there it was—the absurd urge to laugh—because Jungwon, the smug menace himself, waited at the top of the ramp, grinning over a velvet tray.
At the mic, the emcee smiled. “Winners, please—say a few words?”
Sunoo passed you the mic like it was a delicate instrument. You swallowed, found Heejin in the aisle (a bright thumbs-up), found Jake (saluting with a laminated sign), and then—because you could—found your voice.
“Hi. Um—hi.” A gentle laugh floated back to you. “I was going to say I don’t like the spotlight, but apparently the spotlight likes me today. So… thank you. This award isn’t about being the loudest person in the room. It’s about listening hard, feeding the volunteers before they faint, and remembering that people are the whole point of the work.”
You paused, eyes skimming the rows of students, parents, and very committed toddlers.“I want to thank our mentors and teammates who make leading feel like belonging. Heejin for her battlefield logistics, Jake for his, uh, signage diplomacy, Ni-Ki for believing that tape measures are weapons of hope, and Jungwon for… paperwork and tiny crowns.” Laughter again; Jungwon lifted the microscopic paper crown like a toast. “Most of all, thank you to Sunoo for reminding me—us—rule number three: no shrinking. We show up, even when our inner twelve-year-old thinks hiding might be safer.”
You exhaled, lighter. “We’re honored. We’ll keep earning this. And also—we respectfully decline any thumbnails.” Bigger laugh; Heejin made an exaggerated zip-the-mouth motion.
You handed the mic back. Jungwon stepped forward, the picture of officialdom, and revealed a small crystal trophy on the velvet tray. The plaque caught the light:
Best Leadership Awards, 2025
Kim Sunoo & Y/N L/N
You stared, surprised warm and immediate, like sunlight under the ribs. Sunoo’s free hand hovered—Do I?—then he took the trophy with you, your fingers brushing along the cool edge. He angled it toward you first, as if to say: yours, too.
Jungwon cleared his throat in his most solemn voice. “On behalf of the student judges, congratulations. Please do not drop it. It will shatter both physically and figuratively.”
You snorted; Sunoo ducked his head, bashful smile tugging at his mouth as he shot Jungwon a look that said Thanks, menace. Jungwon, ever composed, pretended not to be soft about it.
The emcee lifted the mic again over the applause. “One more round for our winners! Finalists, thank you all. Up next at 5:30, Y/N’s panel on textile mentorship in the atrium—and at 7 p.m., our campus showcase at the atrium as well. Hydrate, cheer loudly, and do not trip on any cables. Please.”
Sunoo squeezed your hand once more as you turned from the mic. “Dinner,” he reminded, quiet enough for only you to hear.
“Dinner,” you agreed, crystal catching the sun as the crowd’s clapping settled into a happy hum. You and Sunoo took the ramp back down together, trophy between you—bright, small, and exactly enough.
Backstage in the atrium hummed with practiced chaos: taped X’s lined the floor, a steamer puffed like a tame dragon, and Ni-Ki was orbiting in tight circles, clipboard in one hand, a mouthful of safety pins in the other.
“Victory line team—my champions, my non-thumbnails,” he announced with a clap. “Four minutes until Y/N is kidnapped by academia for the panel. Quick mark-through. Sunoo, you step out on four. Y/N, join on eight. Pair-pivot at the middle X, split and cross on the return. Easy. Like breathing. Very good-looking breathing.”
You and Sunoo slid into position. He lifted his hand, palm up—an offer, not a push. When you set yours into it, something unspooled in your ribs.
Ni-Ki raised his pen like a maestro’s baton. “Music in my brain and… walk.”
Sunoo led, unhurried, jacket catching the light. On eight, you slipped in beside him, stride in sync. His shoulder squared with yours, your skirt whispering at your shins. The mirror at the runway’s end flashed back the picture: clean lines, no deities—just two people moving well together.
“Middle X—pair pivot—gorgeous,” Ni-Ki trilled, jogging backward. “Keep it like you’re whispering a wholesome secret. Y/N, relax that right shoulder. Sunoo, tiny head tilt on the stop—no smolder, just… simmer.”
You swallowed a laugh and adjusted. On the turn, Sunoo’s thumb brushed your knuckles—a fleeting press that steadied more than it should. The return clicked into place, the cross so seamless it felt like you’d rehearsed it all semester.
For once, Ni-Ki lowered the clipboard without commentary. “That’s it,” he said, voice softened. “That’s the story. Stitch the hem, then cry.” His eyes blinked fast before he covered with a brisk sniff. “Alright, panel in two. Hydrate. And if anyone even thinks about handing you a crown, I will tackle them personally.”
You stepped off the tape. Sunoo held your hand a beat longer before releasing it carefully, like setting down fine china.
“Dinner after?” he asked, gentle, like the question had been sitting in his pocket all day.
The steamer hissed, Ni-Ki swatted at a dangling thread, and the quad’s noise seeped in from beyond. “Something carby,” you said. “Warm, no cameras. Maybe Maple’s—you know, the little bistro behind the observatory? Handwritten menu, mismatched plates?”
A small, genuine smile tugged at him. “The basil butter pasta.”
“And the lemon tart that ruins you—in a good way.”
“Done.” His eyes crinkled. “I’ll defend the tart with my life.”
You snorted. “Truly heroic.”
“Rule number three,” he murmured back. “No shrinking. Also—no sharing lemon tart if there’s only one left.”
“Savage,” you said, cheeks aching with the grin.
A stagehand poked in. “Y/N? Panel in one!”
Ni-Ki swooped in, nudging your belt half a centimeter and smoothing an imaginary crease. “Go wow them. I’ll keep the runway universe intact.” His eyes flicked to Sunoo. “Escort our champion, please. And make sure she breathes like a person, not a cursed harmonica.”
Sunoo crooked his arm with exaggerated formality. You rolled your eyes but slipped yours through, and together you headed for the side entrance leading to the panel tent, steps falling into natural rhythm.
“Dinner at Maple,” he said, more vow than suggestion.
“Dinner at Maple,” you echoed, like a prize waiting at the finish line.
Outside, the late-afternoon light turned syrup-gold. You squared your shoulders; he matched you without hesitation. The swell of the crowd softened into background warmth as you walked toward the mic—runway muscle memory steady in your body, lemon tart already sweet on your mind, and Sunoo’s promise still thrumming quietly in your chest.
The panel tent buzzed with a low, excited chatter. String lights blinked overhead, and the backdrop read “Mentorship in Motion: Building Brave Makers.” The principal stepped to the podium, tapping the mic once.
“Good evening! I’m Principal Han. Tonight we’re thrilled to spotlight a student leader you met… oh, five minutes ago—fresh off a Best Leadership win.” A chuckle rolled through the crowd. “Please welcome Y/N L/N, of the Textile for Youths Club.”
Applause swelled. You walked on, Sunoo slipping into a front-row seat at the aisle, giving you a small, steady nod.
Principal Han angled toward you with a friendly smile. “Y/N, we’ll keep this conversational. First—your club’s mission, in one sentence?”
You exhaled, smiled. “We teach young people to turn fabric—and sometimes a messy day—into something strong enough to wear.”
“Beautiful,” he said. “What’s one mentorship practice anyone here could try tomorrow?”
“Feed your volunteers before you brief them,” you said. “Blood sugar is leadership.”
Laughter. He grinned. “Noted. How do you balance schoolwork, club duties, and… everything else?”
“Boundaries and timers,” you said. “I treat ‘focus’ like a scheduled guest. It gets a start time and an end time. Also: delegation isn’t defeat— it’s community.”
“Last warm-up: what’s the biggest myth about mentorship?”
“That mentors are flawless,” you said. “They’re not. We mess up, we patch, we show how to fix the seam.”
He nodded. “Let’s open it up.” He gestured to a student volunteer with a roving mic. Hands rose. A few quick ones first:
“Where do beginners start?”
“Cut rectangles. Rectangles are democracy.”
“How do you keep kids from feeling judged?”
“Critique the garment, praise the effort.”
“What if there’s not enough funding?”
“Partner with thrift drives; teach mending as a superpower.”
Then—from the back row—a hand rose, tentative. A volunteer passed the mic down the line. The student stood, voice measured.
“You’ve… brought up family and legacy before. Around campus, people say you’re directly descended from Arachne.” A ripple moved through the tent. The student wet their lips, pressing on. “Doesn’t that give you an advantage—or maybe a risk—that others don’t have? Is that fair? And how do you reassure parents there isn’t some… curse tied to your program?”
Across the aisle, Jay stiffened, already half out of his chair near the curtain like a bodyguard with a flashcard. You lifted a hand—palm down, quiet signal. Stand down. He sank back.
You accepted the mic, letting the silence stretch just enough.
“Thank you for asking,” you said. “It’s not an easy question, and it deserves an honest answer.”
Your gaze swept the room—caught Heejin at the entrance, Sunoo’s steady calm, and the glint of the crystal trophy tucked beneath the stage lights.
“I grew up with stories that said: don’t chase the spotlight. That a certain lineage meant… consequences. I carried that for a long time. Here’s what I know now.
“One: I don’t ask anyone to treat me like a legend. No divine metaphors, no special passes. In our club, skill is learned, not inherited. You’ll see our process—measured, safe, teachable.”
You lifted a finger, counting softly. “Two: I don’t use a legacy to excuse harm. If a workspace isn’t safe, we stop. Needles get capped, irons unplugged, feelings checked-in. We build safeguards like it’s part of the pattern.”
A third finger. “Three: fairness. We rotate opportunities. We publish our rubrics. If a kid wants the hard project, they get coaching and a buddy, not a gate.”
A beat.
“And four: story doesn’t equal destiny. My family myth taught me to fear crowds. My friends,”—your eyes flicked to Sunoo—“taught me rule number three: no shrinking. Not to be bigger than anyone—just not smaller than myself.”
A soft laugh rippled through the tent, loosening the air. You leaned in, voice gentler.
“If you’re worried about curses—what I can promise is consent, clarity, and community. We don’t work in fear. We practice repair. We finish the hem, we cry if we need to, and then we try again—together.”
For a beat, silence held. Then the applause rose, warm and steady, like a blanket settling over the room. The student who’d asked gave a small bow of thanks; you returned it with one of your own.
Principal Han leaned toward the mic, smiling. “That may be the clearest answer I’ve ever heard on myth and practice sharing the same space. Thank you, Y/N.”
He glanced at the clock. “One more lightning question—then we’ll release Y/N to go, quite literally, make magic at seven.”
From somewhere mid-row: “Favorite fabric for beginners?”
“Cotton poplin,” you said without hesitation. “Forgiving—like a good friend.”
Laughter rippled again as Principal Han rose. “One more round for Y/N L/N—see you at the runway!”
Applause. You set the mic back in its cradle. From the wing, Jay gave a quick salute; you answered with a look that said, I’m fine. Really. He mouthed, No thumbnails, before slipping away.
At the aisle, Sunoo was already waiting. He didn’t speak—just held out his hand. You took it, stepping down into the soft evening hum, tent lights blinking like quiet stars.
“Dinner at Maple,” he murmured.
“Dinner at Maple,” you echoed, as Ni-Ki’s text buzzed: Runway call in 12.
You squeezed Sunoo’s fingers and smiled. “No shrinking.”
“Never,” he said. And together you walked toward the runway, the panel’s warmth trailing behind like a perfectly sewn seam.
By 6:45, backstage thrummed like a beehive—zippers zipping, whispers darting, a steamer hissing like a tame dragon. Ni-Ki made one last orbit around you and Sunoo, eyes bright, tape measure draped like a medal.
“Okay, champions,” he whisper-yelled. “We breathe, we walk like humans, we do not invent new turns. Sunoo leads on four, Y/N joins on eight, pair pivot at the middle X, split-cross-return, then pause like you’re sharing a legal, wholesome secret. If someone yells ‘slay,’ take it. If someone yells ‘goddess,’ I cut the sound.” He nudged your belt a hair’s breadth. “Perfect.”
From the opposite wing, Heejin’s headset crackled: “Lighting cue A in three. Camera crew—wide shots only. Pixelation protocol on standby.”
You and Sunoo exchanged a glance. He turned his wrist, palm open—offering, never pressing. You placed your hand in his.
“Rule number three,” he murmured.
“No shrinking,” you breathed back.
The music bloomed—drums pulsing like a heartbeat, strings threading through. The runway lit gold.
“Walk,” Ni-Ki mouthed.
Sunoo stepped out first on the four-count—precise, jacket catching the light, mock neck framing his calm. On eight, you slid into the beam beside him. The skirt lifted just enough with your stride, the asymmetrical belt cinched like quiet confidence. The ribbon detail flickered at your hip—movement, not myth.
The crowd hushes, anticipation buzzing low. Your ribs cinch with familiar tightness. Then—spine unzipping—you rise. The noise blurs, fading into a steady wash.
Midway, the tape X arrives. Hands meet—palm to palm—pair pivot, turn like a secret whispered, legal and wholesome. Sunoo’s thumb presses once to your knuckles; the beat clicks into your bones.
From the wing, Ni-Ki’s whisper drifts: “Yes. That’s it. Keep it.”
You split, cross paths on the return as if you’d choreographed campus traffic itself—his collar line mirroring the ribbon at your waist, a quiet dialogue of shape and pace. At the end mark, you both pause, holding that almost-smile: the secret lodged in your eyes.
Third row, Jungwon lifts a tiny paper crown. Heejin, without looking, plucks it from his hand and tucks it away. The front row chuckles. Jake, dutiful as ever, elbows a camera lens upward—wide shot, faces safe.
You and Sunoo take the final walk together—shoulders even, steps matched. The music lands its last note. You stop. Breathe.
Applause crests like a wave—warm, bright, uncomplicated. Ni-Ki lets out a sound equal parts sob and squeal, then claps both hands over his mouth as though he could catch it before it escapes and breaks the spell.
You turn and give the bow Heejin drilled into everyone—respectful, never apologetic. No lightning. No curse. Just the joyful racket of people glad to be here.
Back in the wings, Ni-Ki barrels toward you like a golden retriever in a velvet blazer, skidding to a stop an inch before wrinkling anything. His eyes shine.
“Finish the hem,” he croaks, then actually laughs, “then cry.”
Heejin smooths an invisible thread at your shoulder, voice soft and proud. “You did it. And no thumbnails were harmed.”
Applause spills into the wings like sunlight through a door. Sunoo turns, steady as ever. “Debrief during dinner?”
“Debrief during dinner” you echo. The words land like stepping off a dizzy bridge onto solid ground.
Ni-Ki claps once, snapping back to commander mode. “Quick change for finale—twenty minutes. Then you two can elope with a lemon tart for all I care.” He winks. “Victory line secured.”
You and Sunoo share a look—half relief, half did that just happen? His hand finds yours for a brief squeeze: thank you, I’m here, we did it. Then you both turn to the rack for the final pass.
Out front, the emcee’s voice booms: “Up next—our final looks!”
Backstage, the steamer hisses its approval. You square your shoulders. No shrinking. Not tonight.
The wings buzz with movement—hangers whispering, tape marks glowing like constellations. Heeseung’s soft stinger swells and fades, cueing the lineup. Ni-Ki does one last scan, jaw tight, eyes bright. “No trophies,” he warns, because of course he does.
“No shrinking either,” you counter, smoothing the laurel seam on Sunoo’s shoulder. He grins, lets you fuss a second longer, then gives your hand a quick, private squeeze.
“Final group,” Jay calls. “Let’s show the work.”
You and Sunoo step out with the line, spotlights washing you clean. Chevron seams catch and settle—cadence stitched into stride. The crowd hushes, then bursts like weather into applause. Faculty rise at the rails, clapping with stunned, delighted pride—the kind that says you showed them the path, not just the prize.
You curtsey. Sunoo bows. Together, you offer the audience the neat, grateful arc of what they helped you build. On the far platform, Sunghoon’s ice ribbon scatters the stage lights into stars. Haseul cheers until Jungwon theatrically shushes her, then claps louder himself. Heejin looks misty-eyed; Jo doesn’t bother to hide it at all.
The lights cool. The applause softens. The work—finally—exhales.
A/N: the final part will get posted after i finish work this week lols (i hit the limit for words..I might start posting on ao3 tbh) i hope everyone enjoys this long ass fic ahaha