“Rainy Days Music”
Pairing: You x Introverted musician Genre: Slow-burn romance | Self-insert | College au | Fluff + slight angst + spice Content: Intimacy, mild angst, mentions of fame, supportive!reader, shy!boyfriend, emotional vulnerability, soft smut (nothing graphic) Summary: you’re a Fine Arts student. he’s the quiet boy you met in the music club room. You never meant to fall in love. but you did—and the world eventually noticed what you saw in him from the start.
It was a rainy Wednesday afternoon.
The lecture hall buzzes with idle chatter, pencils tapping on desks and sneakers squeaking against the floor. You’ve just wrapped up a critique session for your latest painting—a sweeping canvas full of ochre and maroon swirls that bled into each other like thoughts in a dream. Your professor’s parting words—"Brilliant color theory, as always"—still warm your chest like sunlit tea. Compliments like that mean something coming from her. It feels like validation, like maybe you’re not just floating through this Fine Arts degree hoping for meaning.
Outside, puddles are forming across the brick paths of campus, the sky a silver sheet rippling with drizzle. You tug your hoodie over your head and adjust your sketchpad under one arm, eyes fixed on the music building across the quad. You’ve passed it a thousand times before. Tall windows veiled with dusty blinds, posters for jazz nights and open mic sessions curling at the corners. But today, you push the door open.
It smells like dust and tuning resin. The kind of scent that lingers in old practice rooms and orchestra pits. There’s something intimate about the quiet thrum of a piano echoing faintly through the hallway—soft, unsure, like someone is playing only for themselves.
You follow the sound.
He’s sitting in the corner of a practice room, back turned to the door. Slouched, like he’s trying to disappear into the cracked leather bench, his fingers brush over the piano keys with a hesitant grace. The hoodie he always wears is bunched at the elbows, and from where you stand, he looks like a sketch come to life—smudged, deliberate, quiet.
He doesn’t hear you at first, not until you accidentally nudge the door with your shoulder and it creaks. He turns.
You know his face from a few classes.
Intro to Art History, you think, and maybe a general elective last year. But he never spoke. Always kept his head down, hoodie pulled up, eyes focused somewhere between his notebook and the floor. He had that gentle quiet about him.
The kind you notice when the world gets too loud.
"Sorry, I didn’t mean to interrupt—" You apologize quickly, stepping halfway back.
He shrugs, barely a movement. "It's fine."
His voice is deeper than you expected, low and slightly rough, like he doesn’t use it often. It gives you pause. You step fully inside, curiosity outweighing any awkwardness.
"You’re... good," you say. "At the piano, I mean. I didn’t know you played."
He shrugs again, but this time, there’s a twitch of something at the corner of his lips. Maybe amusement. Maybe just surprise.
You introduce yourself anyway.
And he nods, says your name slowly like he’s tasting it. Then he offers his. You tuck it into your memory like a secret sketch.
You start seeing him more often after that. In the practice rooms, in the back corners of the library, and even writing lyrics on the back of a takeout napkin in the campus café. You start sitting next to him, asking questions, slipping compliments into the spaces where his self-doubt lingers.
He’s brilliant, you realize. Quietly, devastatingly brilliant.
He doesn’t just play music. He writes it.
Full songs with aching lyrics and tender chords that crawl under your skin and stay there. You listen to his demos on borrowed headphones in your dorm room, pencil paused mid-doodle, heart thudding a little too fast.
"You should post these," you say one night, watching him tweak a melody on his laptop in the common room.
He shakes his head. "No one would listen."
"I would," you say. "I do."
It takes weeks, maybe months, of gentle nudging. But eventually, he lets you help. You set up a basic account on a music-sharing platform, upload one song. His favorite. You type the shared it.
Haunting lyrics. Fragile and beautiful. Give it a listen.
You check the stats every day. He pretends he doesn’t care, but you catch him glancing at the numbers.
It’s slow. Painfully slow. For a long time, there’s barely any movement. But you keep sharing. Keep showing up. Keep reminding him his voice matters.
He starts letting you in. Not just in music, but in life.
You start studying together, dragging your sketchpad to his apartment because his space is quieter than your dorm. He makes you instant ramen while you paint, his playlist humming softly in the background. You fall asleep on his couch one afternoon, only to wake up with a blanket tucked over you and your paintbrushes neatly rinsed.
It’s not a grand confession. Not a cinematic moment of realization.
It’s gradual. Gentle.
It’s staying longer after practice. It’s learning how he likes his coffee. It’s your fingers brushing when you hand him a pen, and neither of you pulling away.
It’s spending the night without meaning to. Waking up in his bed, both fully clothed, his arm around your waist like he doesn’t want to let go.
Then one night, it shifts. One viral song. Then a record company offering him a contract. The number slowly going up. For some reason, it doesn't have much effect on him. All he sees is you
You’re sitting on his bedroom floor, your back against the bed, your knees brushing. He’s talking about a melody that won’t resolve, frustration knotting in his brow. You reach out, smoothing a lock of hair from his eyes.
He goes quiet.
You can hear your own heartbeat.
Then he leans in, slow like a question, and you meet him halfway.
His lips are soft. A little unsure. But when your hand finds the back of his neck, he deepens the kiss like he’s been holding it in for years.
Everything after that is a blur of skin and heat and whispered names. He touches you like he’s memorizing you. Like you’re a song he doesn’t want to end.
You fall asleep with your head on his chest, his heartbeat steady beneath your ear.
It’s not perfect. He’s still quiet. Still unsure of the spotlight. But he’s sure of you.
"Be my manager. My partner. I don’t want to do it without you."
Your heart does this stupid cartwheel thing.
"Okay," you say, kissing his worries away.
The transition from campus life to music industry chaos is anything but smooth.
Your first venue is a converted warehouse with peeling walls and a stage so small it might as well be a soapbox. He’s pacing backstage, fingers twitching like they’re itching for a keyboard. You catch his wrist before he can wear a hole in the floor.
"Breathe," you whisper, squeezing gently. "Just like you did in the practice room. You’re still you."
He nods, silent, but the look in his eyes softens. He always listens when it’s you.
You watch from the wings as he plays. The crowd is small, but they listen. Really listen. Phones in the air, nodding along to words only you used to hear in quiet corners. It’s a beginning.
The following months are a blur of travel, sleepless nights, and takeout containers balanced on hotel desks. You manage his schedule, answer emails, argue with PR teams who want to change his look, his sound, his image. He resists, always looking at you after meetings like he needs you to remind him he’s still real.
You do.
He doesn’t like crowds. He hates the interviews. But he loves the music. And he loves you.
It’s in the way his hand finds yours backstage. In the way his eyes search for you when he finishes a set. In the song he writes after a bad show—one where his mic cut out and the lights glitched, and the label rep almost canceled the tour.
He writes a song called "Steady Hands."
He says it’s about the only thing that kept him grounded when everything was falling apart. He looks at you when he says it. And the world tilts a little.
You wake up tangled in hotel sheets, his head resting on your stomach, his arms wrapped around your waist like you’re something precious. The blinds are half-open, letting in slats of early morning light.
You comb your fingers through his hair. He hums sleepily and presses a kiss to your hipbone.
"We have to be in the lobby in an hour," you murmur.
"Mmm. Five more minutes."
You don’t argue.
The intimacy isn’t always soft. Sometimes, it’s desperate. The kind of hunger born from weeks of silence on airplanes and exhaustion backstage. The kind that has him pressing you against the dressing room wall after a particularly raw show, his breath hot against your neck, your fingers in his hair, tugging like he’s the only real thing you can hold onto.
Sometimes, it’s slow. In his apartment on an off week. Candles burning. Music low. Your sketchbook of half-finished pieces on the bed while he traces every inch of you like a melody.
You don’t need words. You have each other.
He blows up faster than anyone expected.
One song goes viral. Then another. Soon, he’s charting. Millions of followers. Trending hashtags. Fan edits with captions like "he’s the soft boy poet we deserve."
They want to know who his songs are about.
He posts a blurry photo one night.
You two sitting in his bed while he shows you his notebook. Your hand in his. No caption.
The internet erupts.
You trended on Twitter for two days. You get hate. You get love. You get dragged into his spotlight whether you like it or not. But he never flinches. Never hides you.
During interviews, when they ask if he’s single, he just smiles.
"No," he says. "I’m not."
He talks about you like you’re the anchor to every storm.
The night of his biggest concert yet, the venue is packed. He’s pacing again, earbuds in, hoodie zipped to his chin.
You step in front of him. "You okay?"
He pulls you close, forehead resting against yours. "I always am when you’re here."
After the show, he dodges every paparazzi, every backstage guest. Walks right past the flashing lights and autograph lines and finds you in the green room.
"Come on," he says. "I want quiet."
You end up at a quiet bar a few blocks from the venue. It’s almost empty, just the two of you and a bartender who doesn’t recognize him.
He orders two whiskeys. You sit in the booth, legs brushing.
He reaches across the table and threads his fingers through yours.
"Do you ever think about how it started?" he asks. "That rainy day in the practice room."
You smile. "I think about it all the time."
He leans across the table and kisses you.
Soft. Familiar. Like home.
You fall asleep in his hoodie that night, your fingers intertwined on the hotel mattress, the sound of his next song playing quietly through his laptop speakers. It’s unfinished. But you already know it’s about you.
And it always will be.












