Radio (Yujin x Gaeul)
~15k words, breakup, rebound, angst || << Previous track | Next track >>
TW: mentions of/references to suicide
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“When was the last time you had a good day?”
An Yujin remained slumped in her seat, hands on her spread legs, eyeing the university counselor across her. She didn’t know how to respond.
When was the last time she had a good day? When was the last time she ever felt ‘good’ at all?
Closing her eyes, she thought back to a few months ago. A time when Yujin still rode her motorcycle early in the morning to pick her up. A time when Yujin still stayed up late at night to listen to her talking about the difference between monetary and fiscal policies. A time when Yujin still felt a tightness in her chest just by being close to someone like her.
Yujin thought back to a time when she was still dating Jang Wonyoung. A time when everything still made sense. That was the last time she had a good day.
That was the last time An Yujin ever felt happy.
She flinched. The memories started coming back.
“Yujin-ah! Get off me—we’re going to be late. Ya! Haha stop kissing me all over!”
“Are you sure you want me to go on that trip? A lot of boys are coming along. You know how they can get. I won’t go if you don’t want me to, you know …”
“Did you seriously get into another fight? Over what—over me? God, Yujin … what will I do about you. What will I do without you …?”
My Yujin.
Mine.
Yujin.
“Yujin?”
She shook herself awake, blinded momentarily by the bright light of the counselor’s office. Returning her attention to the middle-aged woman before her, Yujin cleared her throat and replied, “I … I don’t know.”
Sighing, the woman inched forward on her desk. “Yujin, I’m not forcing you to think positively, ok? I know it can get hard. But I’m asking you this because cherishing the little things can help you through your bad days. It can give you more … reasons to keep going.”
Yujin wanted to believe her. She desperately did. Anything was better than what she was going through now: a hundred and fifty milligrams of Zoloft per day, weekly check-ins with the year level representative, reflection papers issued like goddamn paperwork, on top of her own requirements for the semester.
The university was doing all this because of her little attempt last month. They claimed they wanted to help ‘keep her alive’. But to Yujin, this wasn’t any means of living at all.
It was just trying not to die.
Reclining back in her seat, the counselor pushed a few papers towards Yujin. Yujin didn’t even think to glance at them before the counselor continued. “Our session’s about to be over. While I still haven’t gotten much out of you, this much was to be … expected. Given what you’ve been through and all.”
She tapped on the first sheet and smiled. “Homework.”
Yujin shrugged. “I already have an entire folder waiting for me back at the dorms. Is this really necessary?”
“I want you to rate your days,” the counselor explained. “Rate them. One to five. One to ten. One to a hundred if you even want. Monitor your mood. Rate how your day goes. Was it a good day? Was it a bad one? How did it feel? Where is it on a scale?”
“Let me guess—next you want me to run statistics on myself?” Yujin scoffed, shaking her head. She was already doing so much just to keep operating at the bare minimum. She barely had the time to add another stupid task on her daily to-do list. “Can’t I pass on this?”
“I’m serious. I want you to give this a try,” the counselor pressed, her face very stern now. “It’s hard to even look forward to tomorrow, or to tonight, or to the next hour. It gets harder when you can’t see the bigger picture. This will—this might … help you regain a sense of control in your life.”
With a final nod, she clasped her hands together. “Track your mood. Rate your days. See how the numbers make you feel when you look back on them. I expect to hear back from you again by the end of the semester.”
Rolling her eyes, Yujin begrudgingly hoisted herself out of her seat and turned towards the door.
“Your homework, Yujin,” the counselor reminded before she could leave.
Groaning, Yujin darted back and swiped the sheets off her desk before stomping out of the university counselor’s office.
27.9
Yujin woke up already feeling exhausted. One hand in her face, other hand scrambling for her phone, she rolled out of bed and onto the floor with a pathetic little whine.
It was already eleven-twenty-seven. Class starts in half an hour.
Popping the pill between her lips, she hard swallowed as she sat in front of her laptop. The imposing white screen and blinking vertical line kept staring at her. Taunting her. Mocking her.
It always did.
Hunched over her keyboard, she forced herself to type a few words out, get an idea written down or something—anything at this point. But who was she kidding? The thoughts couldn’t flow. Her fingers were too busy digging into themselves. Her mind wandered.
“Hahaha! I’ve never seen you in a dress, Jinjin. You look adorable. Maybe I should style you more often.”
Yujin slammed her laptop shut and dug into her hair. “Fuck … Fuck fuck FUCK!”
Another dud.
Kicking against the wall, she forced her laptop into her backpack and tossed it onto her shoulder. Yujin checked her phone one last time.
Twelve-twenty-three.
Sighing, she sauntered out the door and ambled to class.
24.3
Yujin woke up against her will. Her bed engulfed her body so comfortably. Her eyes were shut so tight. Her head was just swimming in half-baked fantasies. It was too perfect to resist.
But her damn phone alarm kept ringing like a siren.
Groaning, she hit snooze and forced herself to at least sit up. Yujin stared at the window, curtains of her short hair draped across her eyes.
It was twelve-nineteen.
“Sleepyhead. I never thought I’d … lay next to you like this … in your room. It’s a nice feeling, no? Maybe … we can do this again sometime—.”
Yujin bashed her palm against her forehead until the thought physically shattered. Her wrist flared up. Her temple throbbed. But what hurt the most was her chest.
She couldn’t breathe.
She picked up her medication and popped another pill in as she sat in front of her laptop. The document details immediately came into view.
Created: two months ago. Word count: zero.
Hanging her head backwards, Yujin stared at the ceiling, “Fucking useless … Should just drop the class. Drop this course.”
Yet something inside her wouldn’t let her do that. This same something pushed her to sit upright and try focusing again.
But after what seemed like hours, Yujin was closer to plucking out every last strand of her hair than she was typing in a single sentence on her document.
Yujin sank onto her keyboard and rolled her face all over it.
21.7
Yujin woke up before her alarm did. That was already a huge first step.
Except she’s been hanging upside-down for the past few hours.
Feet on her bed, body dangling off it against the floor, Yujin relished in the feeling of her blood rushing down to her head. Like this, she couldn’t feel a thing. She thought it would help her concentrate, but all it did was make her feel faint.
She checked her phone. One-eleven.
Closing her eyes, Yujin sighed. “No fucking way I’m going to be writing today. Again.”
Her phone vibrated. Someone was calling her.
“Wonyoung?” was her first thought. While the name never left her lips, she bit down hard on them and cursed under her breath. “Stupid.”
She picked up. “Hello?”
“Yujin!” the girl on the other end of the line announced, seemingly out of breath. “Are you done with class? Can I come over right now?”
Yujin took one look at her messy room and uttered. “You could say that. Why, what’s up?”
“What’s up? The fucking party. Later tonight?”
“Shit.”
“Uh huh—.” The sound of bus doors opening interrupted the other girl. “Right. So the party. You’re coming with me, right?”
“Rei, I already told you—I’m not in the mood,” Yujin replied, pinching the bridge of her nose. “Plus, I have stuff I need to … finish.”
“It’s a fucking Friday, Yujin. You have the whole weekend for that.”
“Yeah, you’re not the one having to deal with my shit. I’m not coming. Feel free to knock yourself out though,” Yujin sneered. “Text me if you need a ride home.”
“You used to be fun, Yujin. What happened to that?”
Silence. Yujin gripped her phone as Rei continued. “I know shit hasn’t been going your way for a while now, but just for one night—one night—can you bring the old Yujin back?”
Yujin didn’t know how to reply to that.
She did used to be fun—even before Wonyoung. She snuck liquor out of convenience stores. She crashed college parties with Rei. She even rode down the highway on her motorcycle while fucking high like she was on some Mission Impossible chase scene without a care in the world.
What happened to that? What happened to her?
Sighing, Yujin said, “Fine. I’ll go. But you’re doing my reflections for the next month.”
“Deal, deal~. Should have just used ChatGPT like I told you to. Ah, but you’re a ‘writer’,” Rei teased, the sounds of a fleeing bus audible behind her. “See you in a few then!”
Yujin ended the call and immediately curled up, tucking her head between her knees. “Fuck. I guess I just did that.”
“Friday night out it is.”
Yujin already wanted to leave the moment she and Rei pulled up to the apartment.
They could hear the blasted music from outside. More than just a handful of muted voices filled the air. Yujin could already smell different kinds of smoke being wafted around too.
But before she could turn away, Rei elbowed her. “Same jacket? Jesus, do you even wash it?”
As soon as Yujin parted her lips to speak, the door flew open and the host greeted them eagerly. “Rei! And, um, is this a friend of yours?”
Rei smirked and elbowed Yujin again. “This is Yujin. Yujin meet Tsuki. She’s my cousin.”
Yujin nodded, but Tsuki was all over her pulling her into a tight embrace. “Welcome, welcome! We have harder drinks too if that’s more your style. Just feel free to let loose tonight.”
Yujin came to hate parties. She believed it was just a part of growing up.
Back when she was in high school, parties were associated with social status. You went to parties? You were one of the cool kids. You hosted the parties? You were popular popular. You knew how to hold your liquor? You were the shit.
Drinking was a privilege back then. It was revered. It was an experience.
Now that they were no longer being policed and they had access to alcohol with just a swipe on an app, drinking was more akin to eating at a buffet on a Friday night.
And Yujin just didn’t have the appetite for it anymore.
Empty cup in hand, Yujin found her own small corner of the room wedged between a bookshelf filled with self-help books and a small cabinet with a vase on it. She bit on the rim of her cup and looked around her.
People making small talk. Bodies bouncing and grinding to the music. Scent of liquor, sweat, and weed. Was this really better than a Friday night alone at home? Yujin wasn’t sure. But she was thankful for one thing.
The party noise helped drown out the noise in her head.
“Sick party, yeah?” a boy exclaimed, approaching her with a sealed bottle of beer.
Yujin tapped her ear. “What did you say?”
“I said, sick party, yeah!”
She shook her head, pretending not to hear. The guy shrugged and just walked away doing a stupid little dance with his hips. Sighing, Yujin plucked her cup from her lips.
Small talk fucking sucks.
Yujin just wanted to go home.
Across the room, she spotted a girl with wide brown glasses dancing awkwardly to the EDM song being played by this wannabe DJ. Her skirt swished from side to side, threatening to flip up with just a gentle breeze. Yujin watched as she lifted her beer in the air and swayed with her hips, knocking over the DJ’s drink. Thankfully, it didn’t spill on his laptop.
Yujin chuckled, covering her own face in second hand embarrassment. “What a loser.”
The moment the next song just finished, Yujin was ready to leave. She ducked past a group of four girls gossiping to one another and reached for the door.
“Yujin! There you are—what the fuck?”
Rei grabbed her wrist and tugged her away. Before she knew it, Yujin was brought over to the living room, where a pair of opposite couches remained vacant.
Nudging her forward, Rei stopped Yujin in front of a blonde girl in a bandana. She gestured to the girl. “It’s time you two met. This is Liz. Liz, this is Yujin. She’s a friend of mine from high school.”
The blonde girl managed a soft grin. “Nice to meet you. Sorry if Rei brought you out here. I just told her I’d feel more comfortable going to a party in a group.”
“Can you believe it’s her first time?” Rei raised, teasing Liz. “Hope you don’t mind her staying with us?”
Yujin shrugged. “You do you.”
“I hope you don’t mind my friend coming along too?”
Behind Liz, another girl emerged. A girl with wide brown glasses. A girl with a flimsy little skirt.
“Ya, is it ok to be interrupting these people?” she whispered, sticking by Liz’s side. When she spotted Rei, she nodded curtly. But when she looked to Yujin, she froze. She didn’t even offer a smile. “Nice to meet you both. Gaeul. Kim Gaeul.”
Rei couldn’t even get a breath in. Yujin immediately interrupted her.
“Yujin. An Yujin,” she said, extending a hand out. The girl swapped from her shaky palm to Yujin’s tense face, before taking it. “Yujin. I like that name. Precious.”
Yujin smirked. “Gaeul. Like fall?”
“Ok you two, you can continue whatever this is after we load up on drinks again,” Rei sassed as she eyed Yujin’s empty cup. “Let’s take the couches before those varsity chumps start sweating all over them again.
As the night went on, it became abundantly clear to Yujin why Rei brought her along. Bitch needed a wingwoman.
While Rei and Liz sat together on one couch, Yujin sat across them with Gaeul and watched them talk. Whenever Rei needed someone to bounce off of her or confirm her stories, Yujin was ready to chime in in between swigs of her drink. But at some point, the two of them were lost in their own world, visibly flirting with each other to a shameless degree.
Sighing, Yujin leaned against the couch and stretched. “Fucking third wheeling.”
“Tell me about it,” Gaeul replied all of a sudden, playing with the neck of her bottle. “I can’t say I’m not happy for Liz though. It’s nice seeing her come out of her shell like this.”
Yujin didn’t know about the blonde girl enough to know whether that was important or not. She shrugged and downed her drink. “I’m getting some fresh air. If Rei asks for me, tell her I’m leaving soon.”
Gaeul just nodded and watched as Yujin glided over to the balcony.
Closing the sliding door behind her, Yujin felt the cool autumn air against her face. They were nine floors above the ground, and yet, she could still hear the busy streets of Seoul underfoot.
Yujin leaned against the balcony with her elbows and sighed. “Finally. Some peace and quiet.”
She looked down and tried observing what was going on.
A couple linked together under a shared umbrella. It wasn’t even raining.
A stray kitten leaping from awning to awning as if in search for something.
A child’s balloon swept up and away, briefly passing by Yujin’s eye level as it rose higher into the sky.
Yujin missed this. She missed being able to just watch people. Once upon a time, it gave her ideas for her work. For her writing. But now, she’s come to use moments like this to just ease her mind.
The door slid open behind her. Over her shoulder, Yujin spotted a bespectacled girl passing through.
Yujin didn’t know what the fuck she was doing here, but she remained silent. She continued watching the people below.
The other girl didn’t say a thing either. Instead, the faint sound of pencil scratching against paper filled the air.
Yujin tried to ignore it at first, but with how Gaeul was frantically dragging the damn lead across the page, she couldn’t help but grow annoyed.
“What are you doing?” Yujin grunted, her back to Gaeul. “Did you really have to do it out here?”
“Just sketching. Practicing a bit. Got a bit antsy just sitting there. Hope you don’t mind.”
Yujin turned around and eyed her. She was holding a sketchbook on her lap. Moving closer, Yujin squatted down next to Gaeul and craned her neck. “What’s this?”
Gaeul lifted a thumb up to frame the view in front of her. “The skyline. Sunsets are a bit overused haha. Thought I’d try and sketch Seoul at night instead.”
Yujin was amazed. Even for a ‘sketch’, Gaeul was really good at capturing depth and detail in her drawing. Sitting down next to her, she asked. “Do you do this when you’re bored?”
Gaeul crinkled her nose. “I kinda do this for school. For work too, in the future. I hope.”
“You’re amazing at it. I’m sure you’ll do great as an artist. Keep it up.”
Gaeul smiled, fixing her posture proudly. “Thank you. That’s … reassuring. I’m a non-major, you see. Didn’t know what I wanted to shift into but I did want to shift out of biology. It wasn’t for me. I took this one art elective last year, and I was immediately hooked. So I thought I’d try more visual arts.”
Turning to Yujin as she tapped her pencil against her knee, Gaeul asked, “What about you?”
Yujin shrugged, leaning her back against the same wall as Gaeul. “Dunno. Creative writing. I guess.”
“So you’re a writer.”
“Was. Or at least, wanted to be.”
“What changed? Gaeul asked.
“Nothing changed, just … shit happened,” Yujin muttered, throwing her hood on. “Can’t really call myself a writer if I don’t even fucking write at all anymore.”
Gaeul chuckled and leaned closer to Yujin. “Can you really call me an artist then if I haven’t even begun studying how to draw?”
“You’re joking. You just do this for fun and you’re already this good?”
The other girl leaned closer with a smile. “Stop it. I’m sure you’re a good writer too.”
“Hate to break it to you, but you’re fucking wrong,” Yujin dismissed with a low chuckle. Changing the subject, Yujin leaned into her as well and tapped on the empty space in her drawing. “What’s with this? It’s like there’s some gap here.”
“Ah, you noticed. I had to erase it for now. It didn’t feel good enough. I’m not the best at drawing people.”
Yujin blushed. Gaeul was trying to draw her.
As they both glanced up from Gaeul’s sketchbook once more, the two realized how close their faces now were. Yujin felt the heat burning across her face, but she couldn’t find it in her to pull away.
“Gaeul? Gaeul!” a voice beckoned through the door. “Where the fuck is her friend—Kim Gaeul! Where are you? Liz is blackout drunk. Help me carry her home.”
“Oh shoot,” Gaeul uttered, scrambling to stuff her things into her sling bag. “So sorry about this. My friend. She’s—.”
Yujin nodded. “Go take care of her.”
As Gaeul leaned towards the door to open it, she paused for a moment. “It was nice meeting you, An Yujin.”
Yujin just nodded again as the girl vanished behind her.
Yujin swore she wasn’t drunk yet, but she felt a lasting warmth all over her face that night.
35.1
Professor Shin slammed the eraser against the board.
“Stop killing your ideas before they see the light of day,” he stressed, pacing around the podium. “I know many of you are guilty of this. Eliminating ideas before you even examine them thoroughly. Don’t strike out your concepts! Rather, refine them.”
Yujin didn’t understand where the old man was getting at. Her head was getting too heavy to keep upright. She just wanted to go back home and lay in bed again.
But when Professor Shin raised his voice a second time, she considered what he said. “You won’t be able to fully see through a story until you sit down and start working on it. And I don’t mean working on it in your head. I want you to work on it on paper. On your keyboard. Out of your mind. It only really starts to develop then.”
He wrote a few things on the board and encircled it with the chalk. “So don’t bury things. Learn to sit with it. Here’s the prompt for today’s class. I expect you all to submit your work before the end of the period just like always.”
Pen in hand, Yujin tapped the tip against her paper.
“Sit with it,” she muttered under her breath, fingers trembling. “Sit with it. Sit with it. Fucking sit with it.”
She forced herself to write some initial ideas.
High fantasy. Warring nations. Star-crossed—.
“What did you call it—DnD? Ya, that’s actually kinda cool. You get to make your own character? Who makes the story? The Dungeon Master? Sounds a little … freaky haha.”
Yujin struck through her idea.
Post-apocalyptic. Zombies. Last bastion of—.
“Ehh? You said it wasn’t going to be sca—AHHHH! TURN IT OFF YUJIN, TURN IT OFF!”
Yujin bit her lip and scratched that idea off too.
Sci-fi. Beginning of time. Origin of the big bang.
She pondered on it for a bit longer and managed to flesh out the idea a bit more.
Entity from the old universe ran out of entropy. Final moments. What does it think about before it all ends?
“I’m sorry, Yujin. This just … this wasn’t going to work out. You and I both know—.”
Yujin crumped her paper and buried her face into the desk. As tears rolled down her eyes, she wrapped her arms over her head and sobbed.
“I can’t fucking write … I can’t fucking sit with it …”
“Not until you’re out of my fucking head, Wonyoung.”
By the time class was over, Yujin had nothing to pass to her professor. But Professor Shin just nodded in understanding on her way out. “Take it easy, Yujin. Don’t force yourself.”
She hated it. She fucking hated it. She hated how each of her professors and classmates new about what happened to her. About what she did. Or rather, about what she failed to do. This act of theirs—this charade of empathy? They weren’t trying to understand her at all.
They just made her feel all the more shameful.
Brushing past him, she dove into the corridor and just kept walking.
“Yujin?”
Yujin looked up. Immediately, she dried her eyes and face. “Shit. Oh hey, um, Gaeul was it?”
“And Liz,” the blonde girl added in a slightly annoyed way. “Have you seen Rei? Is she with you?”
Yujin shook her head. “International literature is that way. Fifth floor.”
Liz smiled and thanked her before running off, leaving Gaeul behind. The poor girl could only fix her glasses in awkwardness as she chuckled at Yujin. “Fancy seeing you again.”
Yujin nodded. “Didn’t know you two studied here too. Rei didn’t say anything.”
“I’m noticing a trend here between our two friends,” Gaeul teased, walking closer to Yujin to avoid the students that were rushing to get to their rooms. “Are you on break right now?”
“Vacant until seven. Our screenwriting professor’s a bitch, but she’s a professional. Only around after work hours.”
“Come join me for mine then. It’s only an hour. I don’t like spending it alone, and well,” Gaeul raised, gesturing down the path Liz took to flee her. “Come with?”
Yujin wasn’t sure if she was going to regret this, but after a huff, she replied. “Sure.”
The two sat outside the building for English and Literature. They found a spot by one of the many stone tables and benches outdoors, where most students spent their time either smoking or making out.
Gaeul sat across Yujin and pulled a sandwich out, munching on it slowly. Yujin just sat there, unsure of what to do.
Without a care in the world, Gaeul stuffed her sandwich between her small lips and held it there as she took out her sketchbook. Immediately, she jumped back into whatever it was she was sketching this time.
With nothing to eat and with nothing to say, Yujin reluctantly whipped out her own notepad. She flipped towards the first blank page. Taking a quick look at Gaeul, she tried to join her in getting some work done.
But it was silent. It was awfully silent.
For An Yujin, silence was welcomed. But a silence without focus was often an invitation for the voices in her head to fill the void.
“Picnics? Yujin, you’re just asking to get bitten by insects. Maybe I can bring some repellant—.”
Stop.
“Mmm, your cheeks are so soft. Are you sure you don’t have any skincare routines, baby?”
Stop, please …
“Hahaha, why are you so quiet, Yujin? Cat got your tongue? I said I love you. I. Love. You. Got nothing to say about—?”
GET OUT OF MY HEAD.
Gaeul flinched before Yujin could even realize what happened. Her fist was balled against the stone table, clenched so tight that she made the entire surface shake.
“Sorry,” she muttered, withdrawing her hand, rubbing it.
Gaeul just grinned. “Thought something was up. You’ve been staring for a while now. Do you plan on just staring at me the entire time?”
Yujin flapped her lips at her in mimicry.
“What’s bothering you? Something on your mind?” Gaeul asked as she put down her pencil and leaned forward. The surrounding tables were empty. The other students had left for their classes. It was just her and Gaeul at the moment. “I could use a break right now. So go on.”
Yujin shrugged, pushing her empty notepad aside. “What’s new? Can’t seem to fucking write at all.”
Borrowing it for a moment, Gaeul flipped through the pages of Yujin’s notes. “Hm. You’ve written some stuff though. Over here?”
“Scrapped. Not good enough. Didn’t feel right.”
“‘A cure for cancer is found, but it comes at the cost of fetal stem cells’? Yujin that’s pretty damn compelling to me.”
“Didn’t have the heart to sit with it. Lost the idea … months ago,” she uttered.
As Gaeul scrolled through her past ideas, all of which were scrapped by now, Yujin added, “Stop sifting through the shit. Those ideas are dead. I don’t even remember what I was thinking about when I wrote those anymore. Just … duds.”
“What do you like writing about, Yujin?” Gaeul asked again, setting the notepad aside. “What are you good at writing about? What comes easy to you?”
“Do you always ask this many questions?” Yujin scoffed, shaking her head. “I don’t know, ok. Stop asking. It’s been a long time since I’ve properly written something in full. Mind’s too … foggy for this shit.”
But Gaeul shook her head. “You don’t need to think about what you used to be like as a writer anymore. Write about the present. Your ‘now’. What’s the first thing that comes to your mind right now?”
Yujin paused.
She allowed the wind to blow her short hair away. She allowed the leaves to rustle between her feet and tickle her ankles. She let her steady pulse beat into her eardrum like a cadence. She let her fingers twitch from time to time against her lap as if weaving verses into her skin.
When she returned to consciousness, she nodded slowly. Instead of verbalizing her thoughts, she grabbed the notepad and began scribbling a few words.
Fall. Paceful. Gentle.
I love the fall.
Gaeul saw her writing and managed a smile. “That’s it. See? Whenever I’m in a slump myself, I just like to, you know, doodle. Do a little silly drawing or two. Maybe you can scribble whatever you feel in the moment, or whatever’s stuck in your head. Maybe that way you can slowly get yourself going again.”
“Thanks. I’ll … I’ll try it out more.”
“So what did you write?” Geaul pried, leaning on her elbows to try and take a peek at Yujin’s notes. But Yujin instinctively withdrew herself. “Not telling you. Not ’til I’m finished.”
And as Gaeul ended up whining and throwing a bit of a fit, Yujin hid her smile behind her notepad as she stared down at what she had written.
Autumn feels warmer than I thought.
33.6
Yujin popped her earphones in and leaned back to stare at her laptop screen. There were a few lines written already. She had built up some momentum. She just needed to let it ride.
But the full cafe was making it difficult to do so.
That’s where the earphones came in. Yujin didn’t even listen to any music—she stopped doing that months ago. But the noise-cancelling effect helped her focus a bit more.
She pictured Wonyoung’s smile from across the table, covering her face as she blushed, laughing at the stupid things Yujin would say to her.
Yujin felt the stab in her chest as she glanced down. When her eyes peeked back again, Wonyoung wasn’t there anymore.
Yujin cursed under her breath. Just as she was about to lean forward to type again, a knee bumped into her table.
A pair of glasses glanced down at her with a smile. “Is this seat taken!”
Yujin flinched and pulled out her earphones. “God, you don’t have to scream. Got nowhere else to sit?”
Gaeul pouted. “Everywhere’s taken. I just wanted somewhere to work that wasn’t home. Do you mind?”
Sighing, Yujin relented and scooted her stuff towards her half of the table.
When Gaeul sat down and unloaded her things, she took a bite out of her oatmeal cookie. As she continued nibbling on it, talking about her experiences with class, her grievances with South Korean politics, and why she thought bell-bottom jeans were a stupid trend, Yujin just watched as she stuffed her cheeks full of food, listening to the other girl yap.
She pulled out her notebook and scribbled a few things.
Chipmunk. Cute. Pet squirrel.
Glancing up, she spotted Gaeul looking at her curiously with wide eyes, cookie now completely gone. “Wah? Wah y’ l’king ah?”
Yujin chuckled and shook her head.
37.4
“Yujinnnnn, come onnnnn! Just a quick drink, ok? We’ll get a few drinks, get a bit plastered, and then head home. I promise.”
“Remind me again why you need me to come with you just to get hammered?” Yujin asked, pressing her phone between her cheek and shoulder as she continued trying to revise a sentence. “Just go by yourself, idiot.”
“Ugh, Liz bailed on me, ok? I don’t want to look like a fucking loser here at the pub. Can you get your ass over here and keep me company for like an hour or something?”
Rolling her eyes, Yujin saved her document and closed her laptop. “I’ll see you in fifteen then.”
When Yujin arrived, Rei was already waiting inside, downing what seemed to be her third bottle of beer.
“Seems like you’re all done with the pre-gaming,” she teased, settling down next to her by the counter. “Aww, did you feel that miserable being bailed on?”
Rei rolled her eyes and flipped her off. “I’m going to pee. Hold my seat.”
As her friend disappeared behind her, Yujin shook her head and placed Rei’s purse on top of her seat.
She took this moment alone to scan the bar for inspiration. Maybe something would catch her eye.
Aged spirits. Greasy fries. Puke bucket down by one corner. Yeah, nothing was going to give her a Eureka moment in this dingy place.
Then she caught it. The scent of almond and vanilla.
Yujin heard a waist slamming against the counter next to her followed by the sound of moaning and kissing. But when she tried to look up at it, the vision was gone. They were gone.
Chuckling, she straightened her posture and drank her beer. “And I’m not even drunk yet.”
Across the room, she spotted a group of girls singing by the karaoke machine, which was new. She took another sip of her beer and squinted at them. “Is that …?”
It was Kim Gaeul.
The dork was hugging her friend a little too tightly as she slurred the words to Dancing Queen. Her friends were trying so hard to clear the song, but all she could do was swing from side to side and scream and giggle into the microphone.
Wincing from the feedback, Yujin bit her lip and whipped out her notepad.
Tiny terror. Loud voice. Good singer. Confident.
“The fuck are you writing? Did you just call me a ‘tiny terror’?”
Rei slammed into her seat, sitting on her purse. Yujin slapped her notepad against Rei’s face and laughed out loud. “Shut up and pay for our drinks already. Another round!”
41.3
She needed some air. Staying at home wouldn’t do.
Yujin decided to head to the mall. Not to shop. Not to go around. Just to sit down on one of the many mall benches by the ground floor and observe. Just watch.
She looked around her and began scribbling different little stories she spun her in her head.
An assassin in a Hawaiian shirt wanting revenge for his ruined vacation. Aliens disguised as naughty children so humans could teach them what it’s like to live on Earth. Pigeons with a network of communication to spy on humans and plot to take over the world with their intel.
When Yujin flipped through her notes again, she felt proud of herself.
The lines were longer. Her thoughts were clearer. Her ideas were sharper.
She felt a hand cup her cheek, and she instantly froze. “Look at you. My little writer. When are you going to write about me, hm?”
Her hand quivered against her lap. Yujin had to remind herself that it was all in her head.
Taking a deep breath, she glanced up and tried to ground herself in the moment. She tried to focus on her present. To her left, she saw a shop that sold shades and eyeglasses at fifty-percent off. That was a good deal. If she had money, she would have definitely bought one for fun.
Maybe I should get Gaeul a pair, Yujin thought, thinking the pink ones would look cute on her. She keeps pushing her glasses up. Maybe a pair with nose pads then?
Yujin pursed her lips and nodded, scribbling some ideas down.
Glases. Seeing the world differently. Tucking hair behind ear. Adjust temples of glasses. Fogged lenses. Wiping them away gently. Feeling her breath against—.
She widened her eyes and scratched that last one off, biting her pen in embarrassment.
44.6
Professor Shin cleared his throat and gestured towards his presentation. “Emotions. Very important. Often either forgotten and horribly underused.”
Walking through the rows of students in their seats, he paced around the classroom while commanding everyone’s attention. “How can you convince your readers that a character is mourning the loss of his family? How can you persuade them to feel the rush of victory after she wins the tournament? No matter how good your imagery and prose are, if you can’t pass the emotion on—it’s flat. Boring.”
He stuck his tongue out and chuckled. “Immerse yourself in their world. In their shoes. Allow yourself to get swept up in their experiences. Let yourself feel it—all the emotions. That way, it can feel more real. For you. And when you write it down, for your readers too.”
Clasping his hands together, the professor rushed back to the podium and leaned against it. “What are you feeling right now, class? Tap into that. I want you to submit something pertaining to that emotion before the period ends.”
With that, the students began silently working on their drafts.
Yujin stared at her laptop. What was she feeling right now? What even stuck with her over the course of the last few months?
She tried to put a label on it. Grief. Confusion. Emptiness.
She tried to sit with it. Then, once the ideas started to grow, she refined them.
Yujin outlined the story of a little deer who lost its parents to hunting. Then, she outlined the tale of a robot who got sent back to the prehistoric era, realizing it now served no purpose for creatures who were far inferior to it in intellect. And finally, Yujin outlined the start of a world where color ceased to exist, and how the ocean became a hellscape for different primordial organisms.
But none of these seemed good enough. None of these ideas were good enough for Yujin.
She tried thinking about it—she really did. There has to be a reason why she was so quick to throw away her ideas. Yujin couldn’t find what the common denominator was. Lack of knowledge on the topic? Cringeworthy material? Difficult to devleop? Lacks a hook? Unoriginal? Uninspired?
Yujin wasn’t sure what exactly was wrong with her ideas, with her drafts, with her plots.
They just didn’t seem to ignite that special sort of fire within her.
She tossed her self-proclaimed filth aside and opened up a new document, hoping for a fresh start. She had some time before class ended. She could still make it.
Grief. Confusion. Emptiness. Loss.
Loss.
“This is the story of a girl. A girl who lost everything,” she mouthed, mimicking what she typed. It was compelling for an introduction. It immediately hooked the readers in and made them wonder what this story was about. But as she tried to map out the plot in her head, the voices filled in the blanks for her.
“Yujin, I … It’s not easy for me to say this, but we need to break up. It’s … for your own good. Mine too.”
“We just … grew apart. It happens. We can’t be the same people forever, can we?”
“I love you … I loved you, Yujin, but I … I just need to choose myself for now. We’re young. We’re dumb. There’s still more to life than … this.”
“Could you forgive me?”
When Yujin came to, all her classmates had left. She was alone in her seat, tears trickling onto the letters of her keyboard, as a bright white page stared defiantly back at her.
“Welcome back,” Professor Shin greeted her from his seat, glancing up from one of the drafts he was grading. “Class ended half an hour ago. It’s … it’s ok if you don’t have anything to submit yet. In due time, you’ll figure out.”
Snorting, she smudged her face with one hand before stuffing everything into her backpack and stomping out of their classroom.
Yujin couldn’t put a single line onto the document.
Pacing around the small space between her desk and bed, the panicked girl mumbled to herself repeatedly. Trying to think of something. Anything. Anything she could put into writing. Anything she could bounce off of. Anything she could work with.
But she was completely dry.
Slamming her head against the wall, she yanked on her hair as if she was milking her thoughts out. “Why is this so … fucking … hard. Can’t believe I ever thought I could … make money off of this. Build a fucking career around this.”
“Maybe … maybe she was right …”
Suddenly, on beat with her head banging, three knocks came from the door.
Peering through the eyehole, Yujin squinted and took one long look before backing up a few steps. She couldn’t believe it.
Unlocking her door, she peeked through the small opening. “You. What are you doing here?”
Gaeul waved at her, holding something in her hand. “Hi. Is this a bad time?”
Yujin rubbed her nape and glanced back at her unwritten project, shrugging. “Every time’s a pretty terrible time for me, but sure. What is it?”
“I heard from Liz, who heard from Rei, that you lived around here. Didn’t think I’d find you this quick,” Gaeul teased. It made Yujin wonder if this girl really knocked on every single door until she found the right place. “I um, was going to ask if you wanted to come see a movie with me. I know the finals weeks aren’t that far away, but … I was supposed to watch it with Liz before focusing on projects. Except … she cancelled on me. Again.”
“Seems like your friend can’t really do commitment well, can she?” Yujin raised, leaning against the door. “Sorry, but I’ll have to turn you down. Don’t know what it’s like for you in visual arts, but we can’t just finish a whole manuscript in a week. I need to get started as early as now.”
“So you haven’t started. Right?”
Yujin gritted her teeth. “No. That’s why I need to get started.”
Gaeul eyed the other girl’s form, scanning her from head to toe. “Another slump? You know you can take breaks too right?”
Yujin knew that well enough. But breaks were earned. They come after putting in the work—not before it. How could she take a ‘break’ in good faith if she knew she had barely even begun with anything?
“Look, I appreciate you looking out for me. I really do. But I don’t need someone to protect me from my problems—.”
Gaeul waved the tickets in her face with a smirk. “I’m not trying to protect you from them. I’m just offering another solution you haven’t considered before. A change of pace, if you will.”
Huffing against the tickets, Yujin pushed them out of her face. “You just can’t handle being alone.”
“And you just can’t handle a lack of inspiration. A muse. It’s a win-win, don’t you think?”
Palming her face, Yujin peeked between her fingers. Gaeul was still there staring up at her expectantly.
When she couldn’t take the awkward silence any further, she resigned and swiped one of the tickets from the shorter girl. “Fine. Just for tonight. And you’re paying for the popcorn.”
Gaeul squealed and grabbed her arm before Yujin could even retreat indoors.
Was this a date? Surely, it wasn’t. They were just friends. Friends who just happened to have some common time. Made some common time for each other.
How did dates go again? Yujin couldn’t remember. It’s been ages since she’s last gone on one.
She ordered some popcorn with Gaeul’s money, but what flavor should she get? She didn’t know what Gaeul liked.
She grabbed some cups for their drinks, but ended up staring at the dispenser for a good five minutes. What did Gaeul prefer to drink? Did she even want a drink?
She held their food while Gaeul fished around her pockets for their tickets. Yujin was about to lean in and check her back pocket, but she stopped midway. That’s not a place meant to be touched so readily by another friend.
None of this was anything friends did for each other, right?
God, this wasn’t a fucking date, was it?
Yujin didn’t know anymore. If it was, she was sure she was doing terribly. She had forgotten what it was like to take someone out. She believed that, at one point, she had it all figured out already. In the past, she had known how to court someone as easily as she had known how to breathe.
But now that she was waiting for the cinema staff to mark their tickets, standing next to Gaeul, Yujin felt like she was back to square one.
She wished there was a manual for this sort of thing.
“Sorry for making you carry all that. Pass them to me when we get seated,” Gaeul whispered as they entered the cinema, holding onto Yujin’s arm. “Ngh, it’s cold in here. Should have brought—.”
Gaeul was interrupted by the laughter between two girls ahead of them, who froze in place as soon as their eyes met. “Y-Yujin?”
Yujin snorted, licking the front of her teeth. “Rei. Fancy seeing you here.”
“Liz?” Gaeul called out, but the blonde girl had disappeared behind her date.
“Look, I … We can explain—,”
Gaeul just chuckled and shook her head. “Go. We’ll sit away from you. It’s practically empty on a Tuesday night. Don’t mind us.”
But Yujin did mind. If Rei and Liz had just told Gaeul what was going on, she wouldn’t even need to be here right now. Before Yujin could pounce on her slimy little friend, however, Gaeul was already dragging her towards the back rows away from them.
Yujin settled with giving Rei the stank eye.
Once they sat down, Yujin slumped backwards and passed Gaeul some popcorn. “It’s just butter. Sorry. I … didn’t know what you wanted.”
“You know you could have asked me, right?” Gaeul raised, plucking up a kernel and munching on it. “You got two drinks for yourself?”
“I—You don’t want one?”
She shook her head, but reached out for the cup anyway. “Not a big fan of sugary drinks. They … make me all hyper. But thanks.”
Yujin couldn’t swallow without feeling a grating sensation in her neck after hearing that. This was going swimmingly already.
Once the trailers were over and the movie began, the two quickly parted and rested against their seats. Yujin in particular was already preparing her notepad, eager to scribble some thoughts as they watched. This was a romance movie. Yujin had forgotten the title. It was some B-lister anyway. She was here to make the most out of her time away from her dorms. She was here to get some much needed inspiration.
“Are you always like this at the movies?” Gaeul complained, tossing her a popcorn. When she threw another one, Yujin growled and caught one with her mouth. “No wonder you’re single.”
Yujin coughed and rose from her notes. “Excuse me? This is just a change of pace. You said it yourself. I have to work on something—anything. Even this could be good practice for my final submission.”
Gaeul shrank into her seat, eyes locked in front of her. “Seems like you’re a little too desperate. A little too on edge.”
In the middle of an idea, Yujin muttered, “Glad you don’t have a professor who’s been waiting for you to submit anything all semester. Seems like you’ve got it easy—.”
Gaeul pelted her with more popcorn. “This was a chic flick too. Feeling so romantic right now.”
Smirking, Yujin closed her notepad and slipped her pen through the bindings. “What’s your point?”
“Just saying,” Gaeul continued, tilting her head towards Yujin. Her eyeglasses pressed against her cheek, reflecting some of the light into Yujin’s eyes. “Relax, Yujin. I wanted to take you out to also … enjoy yourself. Can’t you just take it easy for tonight? When was the last time you read a book, or listened to a song, or watched a movie just because you wanted to? Not because you had to write something about it?”
That was a difficult question for Yujin to answer.
Months ago, she was a voracious reader. She read almost a single book per day. Not because anyone was breathing down her back, but because she enjoyed stories. She enjoyed the art. She enjoyed crafting stories too. Small headcanons. Little bits of fanfiction. Even drafting up her own original short stories. Maybe an occasional novella or two.
Yujin wrote because it brought her joy. And now, now she wasn’t so sure.
Yujin sighed. “Sorry. For being a buzzkill. Rei … told me I didn’t always used to be like this. I think … I think I got what she really meant by that now.”
Gaeul glanced over to the front rows, where Rei and Liz were too busy locking lips with each other to even notice the movie. Biting her own lip, Gaeul reached for Yujin’s hand and held it in hers. She pressed her smaller thumb against the back of Yujin’s larger palm. “You keep comparing yourself to your past. Past you must have been really great then, huh?”
Slowing her breath, hoping she wasn’t sweating like a pig, Yujin squeezed her fingers into Gaeul’s hand. “Yeah. You could say that. Back in high school, I had a bit of a reputation—not to brag.”
“I kinda like this version of you though,” Gaeul replied, smiling. “The you I see right now.”
Yujin blushed, staring ahead at the movie that still played before them. “Sure. I guess. Shit—right, my notes.”
But Gaeul swiped her notebook from her and slipped it into her opposite pocket. “If it’s important, you’ll remember whatever it is later. Just sit back and enjoy the movie, Yujin. You can pick it apart later. But letting it move you? It can only happen once.”
“So just let it.”
Taking a deep breath, Yujin dropped her shoulders, and while still holding Gaeul’s hand, continued to watch the movie with full attention this time.
No expectations. No deadlines. No worries. Just her, Gaeul, and this B-list romance movie.
And she was enthralled.
She enjoyed the pacing of the story. There was a nice build-up of tension and chemistry between the two main leads. She could sense the yearning from the woman, but no so much the man. Yujin thought of different ways she would have written him better.
She wasn’t a big fan of their dialogue though. It felt off. It felt unnatural. They were saying so much but meaning so little. Yujin wondered why. She bookmarked that thought and promised herself to research more into natural exchanges between characters. She filed that away for later.
Yujin couldn’t believe it. She was enjoying the film. She was getting ideas. She was learning.
Towards the end of the movie, Yujin felt a bundle of hair drape all over her shoulder. Beside her, Gaeul, rested her head on her, getting comfortable. “It’s cold. Let me stay like this for a while.”
Yujin stiffened up and didn’t move an inch. She swapped between the movie, their connected hands, and Gaeul’s sleeping face.
Yujin couldn’t fight back a smile even if she tried.
55.7
“Are you kidding me? This is for kids.”
As Yujin stared down at the flashing vest strapped around her chest, she swung the rifle by her side. She felt like an idiot. It didn’t help that some of the parents were looking at her and Gaeul from the window. “Laser tag? You brought me out here just to play—.”
A kid shot Yujin with his laser gun and scrambled off all gleefully.
Gaeul sought revenge for her and chased after the little rascal, exchanging shots with each other. Yujin just watched as Gaeul took a handful of kids all on her own, getting overwhelmed by the little buggers. She didn’t go down without a fight, laughing out loud as she struggled to hit a single one of them.
Cute.
Just then, her own vest powered down momentarily.
In front of Yujin, she saw Gaeul allying with the kids, who had all taken aim at her body. “‘Just laster tag’, huh? Put your money where your mouth is, An Yujin.”
As soon as her lights came back on, Yujin cocked her gun forwards with a smirk and closed one eye. “Run.”
And just like that, all of them fled, screaming for their lives.
63.4
“How about this song? Is this more like it?”
When Gaeul approved of her choice, Yujin placed the speaker down on the ground next to the other girl, allowing it to place Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake for the whole room.
Gaeul closed her eyes, and holding her brush, she did a little ballet twirl before settling back onto her feet. “Mmm, that hits the spot. This will help.”
Yujin wasn’t sure what she was brought here for, but she kept quiet as Gaeul continued painting on her canvas. The other girl dragged her to school on a weekend to keep her company as she worked on her project for a presentation. Yujin only agreed because she thought could spend this time writing. But who was she kidding—she was too enamored watching Gaeul work.
Leaning towards her, Yujin took a better look.
Gaeul was halfway done with her project. It was a painting of a girl wading through an ocean of dandelions. The subject was framed at the center of her canvas, but what stood out to Yujin was how detailed the foreground and background was.
She noticed the way each cloud was painted with the different strokes of Gaeul’s brush. The way the whites blended with the blues, which seamlessly transitioned into the greens and yellows. The interplay between light and shadow to define the curves and ridges of the girl’s clothes. The way she was drawn to be staring right at the viewer—at Yujin—like she had something to say, but couldn’t find the right words to express herself.
“Wow,” Yujin uttered, leaning closer and closer. “All that’s missing is the rest of her face—.”
Gaeul painted a stroke of blue onto Yujin’s cheek. “Back off! You’re distracting me.”
Yujin touched her face and felt the wet paint. She grabbed one of Gaeul’s brushes, dipped it into some red, and splattered it against her neck.
“Ya! What was that for?” Gaeul screamed. She dipped her finger into some green and swiped it against Yujin’s nose. But Yujin wasn’t having it. She picked up a whole can of yellow and threatened to toss it at her. “Ya—YA! AN YUJIN! PUT THAT DOWN!”
The two girls ended up chasing each other like children around the art room, spilling paint and colors all over themselves.
68.2
“Gaeul? Ga—.”
She was asleep. Gaeul had fallen asleep.
Yujin bit her lip as she stared at the older girl’s expressionless face. She looked so peaceful resting like that. She looked like an angel. She looked nothing like the little rave monster she was earlier during the concert they attended—thrusting her hands up in the air, bouncing up and down, bumping into other people.
Yujin tried to hide her smile, but it only widened when she recalled the way the sweaty girl clung to her while singing each line perfectly.
Shaking her head, Yujin let Gaeul sleep on her shoulder. But within moments, Gaeul’s head sunk lower against her chest.
The bus rang. Their stop was shortly arriving. Yujin was about to shake Gaeul awake, but she stopped when she heard her mumble.
“Stay … please …”
Glancing out the window, cheeks heating up to a million degrees, Yujin pulled Gaeul closer to her person and wrapped one arm around her. She secured the other girl against her body and held her tightly.
“Ok.”
71.1
Professor Shin raised both of his hands outwards to his sides as he beheld his final piece of advice to the class.
“Plotting the story is one thing. Now finishing it? Finishing it is another process of its own. This entire semester, we’ve worked together to craft the different bits and pieces of your stories, of your works. Now, we’re here to conclude it.”
He gestured towards their notebooks and laptops. “Only when you’ve gotten it out of your system and crafted it to completion can you really evaluate your work properly. Judging what’s in your mind is easy. Judging bits and pieces of an unfinished symphony is moot. But judging the undeniable proof of your complete creation? That’s the difficult part. It’s mentally taxing. It’s straining. It’s … embarrassing.”
“How could I have created such a thing? Is this really me? I swear, I could have written better! Next time, I guarantee it!” he mocked, playing out several internal monologues, earning some laughter from the class. “But don’t hate yourself. Don’t even hate what you’ve done. Learn to acknowledge what you’ve written and move forward with it from there. But first, you need to accept what you have.”
Yujin stared down at what she had, which was, in fact, barely one-fourth of the expected output for this class.
“Stare at your writing straight in the eye and acknowledge it for what it is. Only then can you really begin to work out what went right, what went wrong, what to improve on, what to continue. Only then can you really grow your writing.”
Yujin still had a lot to work on. Compared to her classmates who were already revising their second or even third drafts, she was still stuck trying to finish her first. But she couldn’t even think about it now. She was all too eager to leave. To head out.
The writing could wait.
So as soon as their professor’s alarm rang, she was the first one out the door. Yujin had bolted out so fast that her professor’s beckoning drowned out almost immediately against the sea of students flooding the corridors.
Yujin had never been to this side of campus much before, but she hoped this was the right place. She remembered where the art rooms were, so she figured the classrooms were on the higher floors of the same building.
“Who’s this girl? Someone’s sister?”
“Ya, wasn’t she that one girl who … you know … earlier this semester?”
“Are you lost? Only art majors are allowed here!”
Ducking past the different students crowding the hallways heading towards their next classes, Yujin weaved through them until she found who she was looking for. She reached out for her and nearly grabbed her arm. “Gaeul!”
Gaeul turned around, glasses nearly falling off her face. Surprised, she pushed them back up her nose and picked up her bag. “Oh, Yujin. What are you … what are you doing here?”
Yujin smiled, bowing politely to the other sunbae Gaeul was talking to until they left. “So you’re all done? With your presentation? How did it go?”
Gaeul blinked twice. Walking down the corridor, Yujin followed her as she told her about it. “You remembered. That’s sweet of you. It went well. It … it was good! I think I did well trying to explain my paintings. Although I mostly did impressionist styles … They were hoping for more variety and all that.”
“Something about art and pretentiousness, huh?” Yujin teased, meriting her an elbow to the spleen. “Are you … are you free right now then? Or do you still have class …?”
Gaeul stopped in her tracks. “What’s this now?”
Rubbing her nape, Yujin stuffed her hands in her pockets and swung herself in place. “I … There’s a housewarming party for a sunbae I knew back in high school. She said we could bring a plus one. And … I was thinking of asking you.”
“Not Rei? She sounds like she could use a drink right now from what she’s been posting,” Gaeul teased, pursing her lips.
“No, I … I wanted you to come along with me.”
Silence.
Sighing, Gaeul inched towards the younger girl until their shoulders bumped. “I wanted to rest tonight, Yujin. I’m really tired. I just wanted to get through this presentation honestly. But … since you’re offering, that’s rare.”
“Sure. I’ll come with you.”
Yujin tried to hide her excitement, but Gaeul already knew all her tells. Lip biting, eyebrow scrunching, rapid foot tapping—it wasn’t even hard for Gaeul at this point. “That’s … that’s great. Yeah. So … tonight?”
“Tonight,” Gaeul affirmed. She tiptoed and pecked Yujin on the cheek. “Wear something nice.”
Yujin couldn’t even say anything in reply as she froze in place, watching the older girl skip away with her backpack in hand.
“Yeah … something nice …”
83.3
Yujin’s definition of something nice meant skinny jeans, a plain white blouse, and a trench coat.
Gaeul’s definition of something nice involved a hot pink spaghetti strap top paired with a carnation-colored mini-skirt underneath her parka.
Yujin could not keep her eyes off of Gaeul during the entire walk to the party. All that filled her vision was the color pink. When Gaeul caught her staring, she just pulled Yujin closer and pressed up against the younger girl.
When they made it to the party, Gaeul dropped the parka just as Yujin knocked on the door. Yujin got a good look at her bare shoulders and how they rose and fall with her breathing. She found that adorable. Her attention was immediately pulled away, however, when the door opened.
“Oh my god, Yujin! You actually came!”
Yujin blushed in embarrassment as her high school sunbae pulled her in for a hug. “God, I missed you so much. It’s been what, three years? Look at you—you’re all grown up now! Aiya, but you never called or texted.”
“She’s quite good at that,” Gaeul teased, stretching a hand out to greet the girl. “Gaeul. Kim Gaeul. It’s nice to meet you.”
Yujin’s sunbae bit her lips and nodded towards Yujin. “Mm, not bad, Yujin you. Minju. Kim Minju. So nice to meet you too, Gaeul. Come inside. Party’s already started.”
As they stepped into the apartment and joined the other guests at the party, Gaeul wasted no time in dragging Yujin around with her. It was clear from the get-go that Gaeul was taking the lead tonight.
Although Yujin was the one who was invited to this party, it was Gaeul who initiated everything.
She was the one who pushed Yujin out of her shyness to shamelessly grab the snacks and drinks Yujin wanted to but couldn’t get out of embarrassment. She was the one who asked Yujin to introduce her to some of her old high school buddies and sunbae—to help the younger girl catch up with some familiar faces. She was the one who had to make sure Yujin wasn’t getting to drunk. The one who had to remind Yujin not to stare so much at her or get too handsy just yet. The one who had to pull Yujin close, to make her sway her hips to the rhythm of the music, to grind against her as they felt each other’s pulses beating louder than the bass.
As Yujin pressed her forehead against Gaeul, who now had her arms wrapped around her neck, she closed her eyes and smiled.
She was the one being dragged around, but Yujin has never felt more alive outside of this moment.
All felt comfortable now. All felt well.
Suddenly, everything was alright again in Yujin’s world. Suddenly, she remembered how life was supposed to be.
86.5
But her whole world came undone with just one word.
“Yujin?”
Separating from Gaeul, Yujin’s eyes widened in terror. “Won … young …?”
71.9
Wonyoung smiled at her.
It was the polite smile someone gave their ex after not seeing them for a while. It was cordial. It was meek. But it didn’t have an ounce of longing left in it either. “Long time no see. I didn’t think we’d meet here of all places at Minju-unnie’s party.”
Yujin pushed Gaeul out of her arms, leaving the other girl stumbling backwards. She took a step towards Wonyoung, limbs trembling like she had seen a ghost. “Wonyoung you … you’re here … You look … you look great …”
That wasn’t what she meant to say, but it came out of her anyway. Wonyoung just chuckled awkwardly and shook her head. “Been better. Thanks though. Oh, let me introduce you.”
From behind her, she gently pulled forward a girl. Shorter than her. Daintier than her. Almost as pretty as her.
Holding her hand up to her chest, Wonyoung presented the woman to Yujin. “This is Jihye. My um, my girlfriend. Jihye this is Yujin. An old … friend of mine.”
An old friend of mine.
An old friend.
Old friend.
Friend.
Jihye beamed like an angel and reached a hand out towards Yujin. “Please, call me Danielle instead. Or Dani! If you prefer haha. Nice to meet you, by the way!”
64.3
“Yujin?” Wonyoung repeated, calling out to her. But Yujin couldn’t say a thing.
How could she? The person who had been the cause of all her pain—all her suffering—for the past eight months was suddenly right in front of her again, looking as perfect as the day she Yujin lost her. Except now, she was with someone else. Someone new.
And worst of all—she was happy. Wonyoung was happy.
Without her.
Wonyoung breathed through her teeth before turning Danielle away from the sight of the unmoving girl. “We’ll um, we’ll see you around, Yujin. Hope you enjoy the party too.”
It was only when Wonyoung had left that Yujin came back to her senses.
She glanced down at her shaking hands filled with sweat. “Wonyoung, she … she …”
Gaeul reached out to squeeze her hand. “Ya, what was that about? Did you know her?”
Yujin glanced up and saw Wonyoung laughing along with Minju, Danielle, and a few other people around them, holding Danielle by the waist against her lithe frame. All Yujin could feel was this chilling dread that scattered all over her chest, clawing at her lungs, swallowing her whole.
“Wonyoung …”
52.9
Yujin couldn’t help but hover around Wonyoung, just barely out of sight. A part of her didn’t know why she was doing this. But a part of her knew she needed this—a part of her knew she needed to know more.
Through the conversations she’s eavesdropped on, she found out several things about Wonyoung. Things that have happened to her since they broke up.
Wonyoung joined their university’s swimming team—even if Yujin knew that woman wanted nothing to do with sports.
Wonyoung learned how to play the keyboard, and now played at gigs around town—even if Yujin knew she was terrible at anything musical.
Wonyoung was getting ready for an early internship this coming semester—even if Yujin knew she loathed conforming to what her parents wanted her to do.
Time and again, Yujin found Wonyoung doing the opposite of what she had expected—of what she had known the girl to be.
“This is all thanks to Jihye, of course,” Wonyoung proudly announced, lifting up a glass of wine to her girlfriend. “Without Danielle, I don’t think … I don’t think I would have moved forward in my life like this.”
“Sure are a lucky girl,” Minju teased, citing the old ‘Lucky Vicky’ nickname they gave her back when they were teens. But Danielle shook her head, lacing an arm through Wonyoung’s. “No, she knows I’m the lucky one when it comes to our relationship.”
Yujin wanted to vomit.
45.1
“Yujin what is going on? You don’t look so … good,” Gaeul asked for the nth time tonight. Wherever Yujin went, she followed like a lost little lamb without a single clue about what was happening. “You know what, let’s … let’s go home. I think you’ve had a bit much to drink, and—.”
But Yujin swatted at her shook her head.
How?
How was it possible? How was it possible that after their breakup, Wonyoung was this … happy? Why was Yujin the only one who left their relationship feeling hurt? Feeling destroyed? Feeling … empty? Did it mean nothing to Wonyoung? Did their relationship not mean as much as Yujin had thought to the other girl?
Yujin thought back to all the restless nights she spent staying up mourning for Wonyoung. All the daylight she burnt just wasting away out of sheer sorrow and despair. All the self-hatred, self-loathing, and self-admonition that she had to carry with her. Every. Single. Moment. Because of her—because of Wonyoung.
It wasn’t fair. It wasn’t fucking fair at all.
She needed to know. She desperately needed to know. Why was Wonyoung like this?
Why was Yujin the only one who was hurt?
So before Gaeul could say anything in protest, Yujin swallowed tensely and shoved her beer into Gaeul’s hands. Then, she stomped her way towards Wonyoung when she saw the other girl was alone. She grabbed her by the wrist and pulled her away into the balcony area to talk to her.
Alone.
Whining in protest, Wonyoung withdrew her hand from Yujin’s firm grip and rubbed at her wrist. “Tch—Jesus, Yujin. What was that all about? If you have something to say, you could have just—.”
“What’s all this?”
Wonyoung eyed her weirdly. “What’s what?”
“All this.” Yujin asked again, gesturing towards Wonyoung as a whole. She wasn’t sure what she was saying. She wasn’t even sure what her point was. But it all came flowing out of her nonetheless. “Is this … even real? Are you even for real right now?”
Wonyoung crossed her arms, pausing, thinking of what to say. “What’s your problem with me this time?”
“We broke up, Wonyoung,” Yujin stressed, pressing a hand to her forehead as she paced around the length of the balcony. “We fucking broke up and … and you walked into this party … back into my life … like everything was fine? Like nothing happened between us? You do sports now. You … perform at gigs? You even want to go on that internship … the one your mother’s been pestering you to attend for years now? I just … I just can’t believe it.”
“You’ve changed, Wonyoung …” Yujin muttered. When she finally admitted it, she felt how out of breath she was. She felt how much her lips quivered. She felt how unsteady her balance had become.
Wonyoung sighed, dropping her shoulders. She shook her head. “Maybe … Maybe it’s because I’ve grown, Yujin. I’ve … changed.”
“Liar.”
When Wonyoung glanced up at Yujin, she found her ex shaking her head hysterically. Chuckling to herself, Yujin pointed a shaking finger at her. “Fucking … liar! You … you were never like this, Wonyoung. You were never—aghh—you were never like this at all! You weren’t like this when we … when we were together …”
“Maybe this was just how I’ve always been, Yujin. Maybe this is just me without you.”
39.2
“What we had was … fun, Yujin. But we both knew our relationship … wouldn’t work, right? It wouldn’t … last.”
33.8
“Our lives, we … we wanted different things. We wanted different courses. Wanted different careers. We … wanted different paths. We had different … things we valued.”
26.7
Wonyoung stepped forward, and Yujin stepped back, pressing up against the balcony. Sighing, Wonyoung bowed her head again in apology. The next words she uttered came out slow and heavy. “Yujin, I … I loved how lively … and spontaneous … and optimistic you were. At least, how you used to be. But Yujin, I … I need something more than just good feelings in my life. I need more than just carefree laughter, or midnight memories, or stolen moments. My life … I want something more than just promises. I want assurance. I … I want stability. I want security. Certainty.”
“I want something that can last.”
She couldn’t believe it. Yujin couldn’t believe it.
She remembered it all.
She remembered how soft Wonyoung’s hand felt in hers. How silky her hair felt against her face as she embraced her from behind. How light and warm her laughter was to her ears. How gentle her guiding words were. How cozy she felt all pressed up against her in bed. How gut-wrenching it felt whenever she was away. How precious Wonyoung’s smile was to her—even in memory alone. And how shattered Yujin felt whenever they fought over stupid things.
Yujin remembered it all. Perfectly. She remembered Wonyoung like she always has been. Unchanging.
But before her right now was not that same Wonyoung she once knew anymore. And Yujin just couldn’t take it. She couldn’t take it all.
It would have been alright if Wonyoung stopped there. Yujin could have lived with it if she hadn’t continued.
But she did.
“Danielle? She … she gives me what I want—what I need. All of it. With her, I’m … I’m genuinely happy, Yujin. I’m not guessing anymore if I’m … if I’m really loved for who I am. I don’t need to … tiptoe anymore. Don’t have to worry about hurting her feelings because … because I might be doing things she wouldn’t want me to do. So I suggest you … you go out there and start finding your happiness too.”
21.4
Yujin shuddered. She wasn’t sure if it was the winter evening air, or the lack of layers on her, or the harsh truth that she was forced to face right in front of her—whatever it was, Yujin’s entire core trembled. “I fought for you … you know that? When the whole school called you a pick-me princess, I … I tore through half of our year level just to remind them they were messing with the wrong girl. I-I … stood up for you. I took … every … fucking … insult your family slung at me—poor, misguided, delinquent, idiot. Just … just for you. I stayed up for you just so you had someone to rant to each night. I lied for you just so you wouldn’t have to force yourself to be perfect in front of everyone. I … I cried for you … every single night since you were gone … I shattered myself for you … wasted myself for you … waiting … in the hopes … that you’d come back to me one day … again … I-I-I … I almost died for you … because … because nothing—god, nothing made sense without you anymore!”
“Our relationship … all of what we went through together … all those years … did it … did it even mean anything to you, Wonyoung …?”
Wonyoung took a final deep breath and smiled. “You were … a wonderful experience, Yujin.”
17.1
“But you were … everything to me … Wonyoung …”
12.3
As soon as Yujin’s knees hit the ground and she curled forward, squeezing and tugging at her guts, the moment the waterworks came bursting out of her along with her pained wails, all the suffering and despair Yujin had felt since they had broken up came clawing its way out of her throat and into the night.
And just like the day everything ended, just like how it was back then all those months ago, all Wonyoung did was mutter the word ‘goodbye’ as she left without a trace, floating away like a ghost, never to be seen again.
Never again.
Yujin got wasted beyond redemption.
Minju had to pry her away from downing the last bottle of whiskey—the same bottle she was gifted as a housewarming gift by one of her college friends. Yujin was sweating through every pore in her body, unable to stand steady for more than two seconds at a time. She couldn’t recognize any of the faces hovering over her. She couldn’t hear anything that anyone was saying. She couldn’t even stop the world from spinning around her.
But it wasn’t enough. This wasn’t enough for her at all.
Not if she wanted to cleanse Wonyoung from her system.
They tried to haul her up. They tried to kick her out of the apartment. But Minju was too kind. She couldn’t do that to an old friend. And Yujin was strong. She could easily wrestle against three different guys at once if she had to.
Thankfully, Gaeul was able to walk her out of the apartment and towards the fire escape without any issues. There, she rested Yujin against the wall to sober up for a bit.
By the time they were alone, Yujin had gone quiet. She was empty. She was numb. She could only glance at the tiles on the floor—hollow and dead inside.
Squatting down in front of Yujin, Gaeul dabbed at her face with her handkerchief. Yujin didn’t even flinch at all. She lurched forward like she needed to vomit, making Gaeul fall backwards, but when she swallowed roughly and signaled she was alright, Gaeul shook her head and crawled towards her again.
“So. Are you sober enough to tell me what the hell went down back there?” Gaeul demanded, poking Yujin’s cheek with the cloth. “If not, then I am never going out with you again, An Yujin—.”
“Wonyoung.”
Gaeul paused, letting Yujin continue. She knew something was completely off. The girl next to her wasn’t herself at all. Her eyes were darting all over the place. Her breathing was erratic. She sounded … broken.
“Wonyoung, she … she’s my ex,” Yujin began to explain, pushing down stomach acids between each breath. “We dated for three years … three … fucking … years … and … and she suddenly showed up … and … she has another … another girl, and … we talked … talked about … about …”
Yujin pinched her eyes shot and began sobbing into her arm. “I fucked up … I’m so fucking messed up, Gaeul …”
Gaeul rubbed her head, trying to soothe her. But the younger girl wouldn’t relent, pushing her words out and past her tears. “W-We were childhood friends … high school s-s-sweethearts … Everyone said we were … we were inseparable … And we knew that, we … we agreed to go to college together … share the same apartment … find work in the same city, a-and … and it was all … all for nothing.”
“All for nothing …”
Gaeul wanted to say something, but Yujin interjected. “Something felt missing … for her … for Wonyoung … I knew that from the start … More than friends, but … not enough to be really … really lovers … But we rode with it … we kept dating … and I didn’t mind. I was happy … happy with how we were … But Wonyoung …?”
She remembered every last word Wonyoung told her that day. And she remembered every last word Wonyoung told her tonight.
Biting her lips firmly, Yujin slammed her fist into the floor. “But she couldn’t … couldn’t … it wasn’t enough for her … We broke up Valentine’s … Valentine’s of freshman year … Said she couldn’t keep doing this anymore … couldn’t keep going on in a relationship that … that makes her want more … need more …”
Yujin reached out for Gaeul’s arm and held it faintly. “Gaeul, I … I tried … ok? I tried to be more … for her … But still it … it wasn’t enough … it was never enough, I … I-I could never be enough … for … her …”
Yujin punched her cheek. Again. And again. And again. Gaeul was sobbing next to her, trying to hold back her punches, but Yujin was stronger than her. Each hit connected with a loud blow.
“I … fucking … hate myself … I hate how Wonyoung … how Wonyoung’s unaffected by all this … how … I’m the only one hurting … how … how Wonyoung’s changed … but I’m … I’m still the same … Haha … worse even … I hate how I lost someone so …. beautiful … and precious. .. a-and—fuck … FUCK! I HATE how pathetic I am … I’m so pathetic Gaeul … so … so …”
“But you’re not alone, Yujin.”
Pressing Yujin’s balled fists against her own cheeks, Gaeul sniffled and looked Yujin in her reddened eyes. “Yujin … you have us. You have your friends, you have Rei, you have your writing, and … and you have me.”
It would have been fine. It would have all been alright if Yujin just stopped there. But whether it was due to her inebriation or due to her swelling apathy, Yujin pushed past her better senses and said what she said next.
“You don’t know me enough, Gaeul … You don’t fucking know me at all.”
Gaeul froze, shrinking smaller into the space between Yujin’s clenched legs.
The drunken girl chuckled, shaking her head. “I could watch the whole world burn tomorrow … and I wouldn’t give a fuck. As long as I have her, I … she’s all … she’s all I ever needed …”
“She’s all I ever fucking needed …”
Withdrawing her hands from Yujin’s person, Gaeul wiped her fingers against her sides as if in disgust. “So did the time we spent together mean nothing to you then, Yujin?”
She shouldn’t have, but she replied, staring right at Gaeul. “You can’t compare to her. Wonyoung was my everything. She’s—.”
SLAP.
It stung—swift and sharp. It deafened her for more than a moment. By the the time Yujin recovered, Gaeul was already walking away from her, leaving the mess of a girl all by herself.
Yujin didn’t know a slap could sober someone up this fast. Because the moment Gaeul’s footsteps disappeared, she found herself kneeling over her own shadow and bursting into tears again.
Crying harder than she ever did tonight.
9.6
Bottles on the floor, hunched over her laptop, Yujin’s eyes fluttered open. The deadline for their final draft was tomorrow. How many words were on her screen?
Zero.
She fought the urge, but she caved—she vomited all over her keyboard. Then, she passed out onto her gruel.
7.5
Banging her head on the wall, blood trickling and drying against her forehead, Yujin thought back to Wonyoung. She thought back to what she had said on the balcony that night, and she thought back to what she could have said to Wonyoung to change things.
But when her mind wandered over to what Gaeul had said to her, and what she had said in reply to Gaeul, she ended up bursting into tears and readily faced the wall again.
She banged her head against it harder.
4.1
Hundreds of unread messages from friends. Several missed calls from Rei. Packages left outside her door meant to supply her through her isolation. Dozens of letters from the university.
None—not a single one of them were from Gaeul.
Yujin ripped up her pillow and sobbed between the torn halves, biting and clawing at them for any semblance of relief.
2.4
“So, welcome back. How have you managed this semester?”
Yujin didn’t respond. Her mind was everywhere and nowhere at once. She couldn’t remember what the university counselor had just asked her. She couldn’t even remember how she got here.
Trying to keep the conversation afloat, the woman nodded. “Ok … did you try doing what I asked you to? Could I take a look at it if you did?”
Ratings. Homework. Mood.
Yujin snapped. Finally, something she recognized. Something she could focus on. She pulled out a couple of stapled papers from her bag and slapped it onto the desk.
The counselor skimmed through them.
“Hm,” she grunted, checking it again to be sure. “These are all … zeroes.”
Yujin didn’t respond.
Sighing, the counselor took a deep breath. “Is this the truth? That’s all I need to know. Then, I’ll let you go.”
Yujin should have nodded. She should have just accepted the offer for an early release. But a voice trickled into the back of her mind—it was Professor Shin.
Sit with it. Accept what you have. Acknowledge it.
Acknowledge it.
Begrudgingly, like she was moving through molasses, Yujin picked up the tattered bundle of papers she had kept beneath the first one. It was worn. It was torn in some places. It was dried from her tears. But she presented it to the counselor, and pushed it across her table.
The woman took more time now to read to completion what Yujin had written.
Whistling, she clicked her teeth. “Now this—this feels more realistic. Bit of fluctuations here and there. Seems like you had a … bumpy ride.”
It seemed about right to Yujin. She was ready to go if that’s all that the counselor wanted to talk about.
“But I noticed a peak. Right about here,” she encircled with a finger. “What happened during this period? What happened to you, Yujin?”
Yujin trembled. Her fingers wouldn’t stop digging into the side of her legs. She knew this was coming. She knew this was going to happen. Yujin immediately regretted showing her the truth. This was the last thing Yujin wanted to be forced to confront.
She was the last thing Yujin wanted to remember right now.
“Yujin!”
“Yujin~”
“Yujin …”
But when she closed her eyes, even for just a moment, it wasn’t Wonyoung’s voice that she could hear in her head anymore. It wasn’t even Wonyoung’s face, or her touch, or her memories that played in her mind whenever the void reached out to claim her.
It was Gaeul’s. It was Kim Gaeul’s.
“There’s … someone.”
Yujin started, and immediately, the counselor perked up. Biting her lip, Yujin couldn’t stomach what she was about to say, but she spewed it out anyway. “She’s a year above me. A … bright ball of sunshine you just want to … stuff in your pocket and keep to yourself. Warmer than … a delicious cup of hot cocoa on a cold winter night. Gentle. Childlike. But also … very mature. She … she turns off all the… voices and static in my head when I’m with her. Until all I can tune in to … until all I can think about … is her …”
She lifted a hand up to her face and immediately felt how damp it was. Chuckling, she let out a shaky breath and looked up at her counselor for the first time since visiting her. “She gave back color to my life and now … now I … I messed up …”
“I messed up …”
“You’re dismissed then.”
Widening her eyes, Yujin pressed against her eyebags and wiped her tears away. “What …?”
“You heard me,” the counselor repeated with a smile, filing Yujin’s papers into a cabinet beneath her. “Go to her, Yujin. Don’t tell me what you’ve realized. Tell her.”
Tell her.
13.5
Yujin tore through the corridor of the administrative building and pressed the elevator buttons rapidly. When she couldn’t wait for more than a few seconds for a response, she cursed at it and ran towards the stairs instead.
24.9
Catching her breath, she broke out onto the campus streets and made her way to the visual arts department. Hair flowing in the wind, dried lips clenched together, fingers clutching her heavy backpack.
39.1
Crawling against the sides of the wall, she dragged herself up flight after flight of stairs as she forced students and teachers alike to step out of her way, stopping for no one as she rampaged through the building.
45.8
And once she finally made it to her classroom—in the same classroom where she last saw her—Yujin slowed down only to compose herself.
This was it. Her only chance.
She motioned to knock, but it was already open. Peering inside, Yujin spotted a single girl sitting on a stool with her back to the door, clutching a brush in one hand and her palette in the other.
It was Kim Gaeul.
59.2
Silence filled the room. It was only broken by the squeaking of her shoes.
Yujin cursed. Gaeul surely must have heard that. But she remained unfazed—she continued painting her canvas in elegant and controlled strokes. Simply not caring at all.
Rubbing her nape, Yujin took a few steps towards Gaeul. It wasn’t until the sixth step that the other girl spoke up at last. “What do you want with me?”
Yujin froze. “I know you don’t want me to be here—.”
“I really don’t. I’m glad you know it.”
“But I … I came here to um … to say something to you—.”
“Really? I don’t care. Feel free to leave.”
66.3
Yujin bit her lip and took another step towards Gaeul. Then another. Then, another.
“I … I don’t really deserve this chance, but … but fuck … I’m sorry. I was drunk. I didn’t know what I was saying, but … I was wrong. I was really wrong … and now, I-I … I know better.”
Sighing, Gaeul turned to face Yujin. Her expression was neutral. “That’s a start. And?”
“A-And … you know—.”
“Hm? What do I know, Yujin?” Gaeul interjected, crossing her arms while still holding her materials. “You apologized. You’re done. What more do you have to say to me?”
Yujin gritted her teeth. Gaeul was making it difficult, but she knew she deserved it. “You know what I mean … about … you. About … us …”
Gaeul shrugged, pointing at Yujin with her brush. “No. I don’t. I really don’t. And if you’re going to just stand there instead of saying what you really mean, then I don’t want to see you here. Or hear from you. Ever. Again.”
74.5
Yujin closed the gap between them in a heartbeat and held onto Gaeul’s shoulders, leaving the older girl with nowhere else to look other than right into Yujin’s eyes, where tears began to form.
“I like you.”
The words sounded so foreign, yet so familiar. She hadn’t said those three words in a long time. Yujin wasn’t used to it yet. Yujin didn’t think she would be ready to say them again this soon. But with Gaeul, it came out easier than she expected.
“I like you, Gaeul, I … I really do. And I know … I know ok … I’m not … perfect. I’m not … easy. I’m not … exactly well. I’m still trying to put myself back together again—you’ve seen it … But … god, I just … I just now there’s one thing right about my life so far. And that’s you. I don’t know where the hell I’m headed or … or what I’m going to be doing next, but … when you’re around? It’s … it’s bearable. Life is … bearable. When you’re around me … it makes me feel alright … and I … you’re the only voice I can hear in my head … like I’m tuned into you … all the time …”
Shaking, gasping, and utterly out of breath, Yujin choked on her last words. “I just want you with me … If you’ll have me … I … I want you by my side again … all the time … Please?”
“I love you—.”
She felt a pair of lips press up against hers, and immediately, Yujin’s heart bounced all over her chest. She felt … different. She tasted … different. This wasn’t exactly what she remembered kissing to be like, but she could get used to it.
It was nice. It was warm. It felt wonderful.
83.1
When Gaeul pulled away, she almost wished she could dip back in again, but Yujin tempered herself and waited. Pressing a finger to Yujin’s lips, Gaeul chuckled. “I know, silly. I’ve known since way back that you were into me. I’m glad you finally realized that.”
“What …? S-Since when?”
Gaeul smirked and whispered. “Since you kept staring at me at our first party together. You looked like such a dork watching me dance. It was almost embarrassing seeing you like that.”
Yujin hid her face against Gaeul’s shoulder before peeking up from it. “Sorry.”
“You have guts—I’ll give you that. Crawling back to your rebound, begging for her back, especially after telling her she could never compare to your ex-girlfriend,” Gaeul teased, shaking her head. “What made you so sure I was still willing to take you back? Was the slap not clear enough for you?”
“I-I … I just … I had to try—.”
“And what would you have done if I said no? Gosh, you’re such a loser,” Gaeul continued, chuckling, holding Yujin close too. “But you’re my loser now, aren’t you?”
“That’s it. I’m dead. I’m gone. I’m—.”
Gaeul pulled her in for a deeper, more passionate kiss to shut her up and stop her from ruining the moment.
Once Gaeul had finally staked her claim, once they had felt how the other had really felt for them, once their first moment of intimate connection was etched eternally across each other’s lips, Gaeul gently withdrew herself only to press her nose back against Yujin’s.
“Whatever this is … whatever we become … let’s figure it out as we go, ok?”
“Ok,” Yujin replied, nuzzling up against her new lover. “Whatever it takes. Together.”
And just like that, the voices have never been more silent in Yujin’s head.
94.7
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A/N 1: Hope you enjoyed this week's track. Sorry if it was a bit delayed. Struggled with my confidence in writing. Like Yujin, I felt like this was a dud. But I wanted to get this fic out there nonetheless. Hope it wasn't too bad. A/N 2: Bonus points if you have played Dispatch before. Love that game. Love this song. IVE Dispatch AU maybe?
















