today, at least, sunday afternoon on a whim—he’s redecorating. contemplating the proper placement for his new addition, a rustic vase bid off an auction in seoul when a knock at the door steals away his attention. eh? it isn’t like he’s given his address out to anyone. so? who could it be?
he moves before he realizes, vase still in hand whilst reaching for the door. though, what’s to come is something seonho can’t possibly fathom. not in a million years.
introducing: blast from the past, name he hasn’t thought of in years, held hands, stomachaches, hole-in-wall eateries, shared notes—kim eunsoo. college girlfriend.
he almost wants to laugh.
“i should be the one saying ‘oh’.” seonho speaks with ease, deep timbre rich with amusement at all that he could read off her face. thankfully, at this exact time and space, eunsoo’s reactions hold more weight than his own. something to cling and harp on (not the most chivalric gentleman are you?) over his own surprise. but more importantly—his gaze drops to the bottle in her grasp, brow arching as he points a finger.
what were the odds, really?
sure, the world's small enough—for paths to be re-crossed, faces flickering into recognition, for nostalgia and memory to have the sway that they do over the plight of human emotion. a decade and then some is time aplenty to let bygones be bygones. but in this very moment, even the courteous space between the foot of his door and where she stood frozen suddenly feels painfully intrusive.
so much for going the distance.
“...right.” if it didn’t seem like it was possible to be more caught off-guard somehow, then there you have it. eunsoo's eyes rove over his face, the newness of the pleasant nonchalance and the years that have sculpted it. a newer realization strikes in the wake of it: the last either of them had seen each other was through the grainy blue wash of a monitor screen. life had briskly moved on since—the who-what-where-and-when’s of anyone and anything reduced to nothing more but trite gossip at the odd school reunion, then nothing completely.
( ‘he got married a while back, didn’t he?’
‘oh, yeah. that’s right.’ )
she shifts back by half a step, unsure of what to do and too certain of what needs to be done to escape this situation all at once.
that what? her mind lags, then races, lightning quick. the wine. “no.” a single syllable that cuts too sharp, too fast. why are you lying? “uh, i meant–” what are you supposed to mean? that this was for the person over at #280? over 60 units down? she catches a glint of ceramic and with full, bludgeoning confidence announces: “–it could be.” gesturing to the vase, “trade rare item for rare item, how’s that sound?”
like you shouldn’t have said anything at all, goddamnit.