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mgg-81 · 17 hours
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I feel like a fool ❣
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mgg-81 · 1 day
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— FOR THE NIGHT. a Christopher Bahng fiction
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Christopher Bahng x fem. reader
WORD COUNT. 1.1k words
AUG'S NOTES. this bangchan is from my “Korea’s Most Wanted” universe because i have yet to get over him from october…
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“Bin, you said it was shipped friday.” The man, Christopher Bahng, grumbles, massaging the pinch between his brows.
His counterpart, Bin, whom he was now quarreling with on the phone groaned profusely, claiming how shipments were already slow—not to mention with the new investigations on his business underway.
The life of The Gunsman isn’t an easy one. It’s a constant game of tag against the police and the government while wielding a well-planned dictionary of excuses to avoid suspicion. 
So now, as Bahng’s precious system becomes increasingly jeopardized, he finds himself losing more and more sleep to a worrisome degree.
And, having left the party filled with chairman, associates, and colleagues alike, Bahng slips into the safety of his car, once again troubled with the demands this illegal trade calls for.
“Well tell him I’ll have to serve his head on a platter if the ammunition doesn’t arrive by Friday. I’m running a charity event with how many funds I’ve given the idiot.”
Although halfway into Bin’s response, a quiet, though audible sound rustles in his backseat.
Instantly, he’s lurched a pistol from his thigh, aimed directly at the responsible interruption.
“Bahng. Bahng?” Bin echoes, only to be hung up on as Chris takes in the sight before him.
Lying in his backseat, curled up in a miniature ball, is a girl.
Your face is wrinkled in discomfort, hand resting right below your cheek, smushed against his car, a Lamborghini’s, interior.
How you got here without him noticing is beyond him, how long you’ve been here an even larger mystery.
His hand falters with the pistol, gawking with obvious surprise prior to stuffing the weapon back into its leather holster.
Instinctively, he would’ve called an assistant, asked them to take you home, find someone who knew you. Except, by the look of your current state, he has an inkling you wouldn’t be the greatest help navigating.
You’re gone.
Plus, the party’s already drawing to a close, people scattering out in every direction. The last thing he needs is to draw attention to himself.
Bahng may work illegally, lacking the fear of blood on his hands, but he’s not heartless.
Stifling a sigh, he rakes a hand through his hair, repeatedly clearing his throat in the case you woke up.
Leave it to him to end up with a random girl in his backseat.
Fine. Home it is.
Or, one of his many homes in the area.
Starting the engine, he spares repeated glances at you on the drive back, simply met with your same, woeful expression. Eyes screwed shut, lips pursed, cheeks stained a pink hue.
Pulling in, he stalls in the front seat, debating on all his morals up till now.
“I can’t believe I’m doing this..” Words a mere mutter, he carefully opens your door, gingerly dragging you out from your awkward position.
Knees pulled to your chest, Bahng keeps one, scarred hand on your back and another beneath your thighs while your head hangs, both hands bunched into fists, pressed to your chest.
Scared.
Whatever happened before, however you got here, you were scared—that much was known.
Somehow, the realization had him holding you closer.
Swiping the code to the door, he silently curses the loud beep, confusing himself with his concern for you.
Why did he care? You’d wake up, he’d get your home address and send you off. Why was he now so conscious about your comfort?
Heading up the winding stairs, he pulls his office chair from its place, deciding water as the best option.
“I’m going to put you down for a second, okay?”
Gently idling you into the chair, his movements halt when your arms reach up around his shoulders, a soft, barely divisible whine slipping past your lips, unwilling to let go.
He can barely recognize anything with how loud his heart rams against his rib cage.
Pull yourself together Bahng.
Ensuring you were still asleep, he slips into the kitchen, filling a glass with water before returning to you.
Your head jerks from when he holds the rim to your mouth, unwilling to cooperate.
“Just water sweetness,” He soothed, hating how worried he was, how senseless this behavior was.
Yet, he only continued to ease you into each sip, palm cupping your cheek for support, narrowly masking his astonishment when your eyes slowly opened, barely awake.
“Mm..?” Your vocal cords betray you, leering on the verge of dream and reality as you try acknowledging your surroundings.
No amount of recollection aids your perception in figuring out how you got here, only aware of the blaring ache in your head and a strangers voice in the distance.
One thing’s for certain. You feel awful.
Discerning the splash of water dumped down a sink, you’re once again hoisted into his arms, disappearing back into unconsciousness as Bahng nudges open his bedroom door, settling down on the edge of the bed.
“I don’t mean to man-handle you, but we need to get these shoes off.”
Situating you upright, his arm slips down, propping each of your ankles where he can pull the heels from your feet.
Softly placing you down, he savors your feeble grip grasping at his clothing, gradually loosening in an attempt at holding his face.
“Unfortunately, I can’t stay here all night sweets, you’re gonna have to let go,” Bahng whispers, easing your wrists down to your sides.
Unfortunately? What’s gotten into him?
Although, just as he adjusts the comforter over you, turning to go, he hears a sniffle.
C’mon, ignore it, she’s fine.
Another sniffle.
Screw it.
“If you tell me where you live I can take you home?” He utters, lingering by your bedside like a child waiting to hear if they can go on a play date.
It’s painful admitting the effect your tears have on him, brows creasing so sadly in a way he can’t ignore.
“Are… Are you gonna hurt me?” You whimper, feeling absolutely exhausted the longer your mind races, frantically piecing together any clues of your whereabouts to no avail.
The pad of his thumb wiping free falling tears, he shakes his head, a miniature smile gracing usually serious, unmoving features.
“I can’t say I haven’t hurt someone before, but I’m not gonna hurt you, alright sweetness?”
Nodding fervently, his face contorts, admiring the adorable manner you blink up at him, lashes all clumped from crying.
Look, his ego isn’t too fragile to admit you’re cute.
“..How did I get here?”
Bahng chuckles.
“I don’t know the answer to that myself.”
Freeing your arm from his sheets, you furiously rub your eyes, frown tugging at the corner of your lips, hiccuping as your breathing shallows.
“I know things are scary when you’re this drunk. I promise everything will be a thousand times better in the morning.”
And with that, he pulls the comforter over you, bidding a quiet good night and nearing the door for a second time.
This time, you intervene, latching onto the fabric of his shirt.
“Thank you.”
What did he just get himself into.
He sucks his teeth, surveying the sleepy eyes you’re torturing him with.
“Don’t mention it.”
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sunboki, may 2022 ©
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mgg-81 · 4 days
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Lee Know Fic Recommendations
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a - angst f - fluff s - smut
⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆
One Shots
Thanksgiving With You (f) ⋆˙⟡♡ Your plans to go home to America for Thanksgiving are uprooted the night before you're supposed to leave. Unable to stand seeing you upset, Minho decides to take matters into his own hands and make sure you get to celebrate no matter what.
A cat proposal (f) ⋆˙⟡♡ minho is in love & wants to marry you
Handle With Care (f s) ⋆˙⟡♡ You've had a truly awful day, luckily, your adoring boyfriend Minho is there to make it better.
Lowkey (a f s) ⋆˙⟡♡ catching feelings for lee minho was inevitable from the start. falling for him is as easy as breathing, but how are you supposed to let him know how you feel when you spend more time fucking him than talking to him? OR, the only thing you're more scared of than losing minho is loving him.
Call of the Siren (s f) ⋆˙⟡♡ the effect he has on people is obvious, they’re drawn to him like he’s an oasis in a desert. then, with a small jingle of a bell that announces his arrival into your store, he attempts to ensnare you.
Cat and Mouse (a s f) ⋆˙⟡♡ your co-worker has been on your case ever since you've started your time at the company. a strange turn of events and circumstance changes all that.
horror house (a s) ⋆˙⟡♡ you're stuck in a horror house alone—your only way out is with the guy who hates your guts. halloween themed enemies to lovers with minho.
makes me dizzy (s) ⋆˙⟡♡ the best surprises come from the most unexpected sources - like having your crush corner you in a frat party after hearing you confess your deepest desires of him in the background of a video.
Love Said To Soul (a f s) ⋆˙⟡♡ When the God of Love is tasked with humiliating a beautiful mortal girl, he finds himself much vexed to discover her immune to his skills. Determined to discover the root of the problem, he takes to mortal form and embarks upon a dastardly ruse that requires his getting close to her. The God of Love thinks he knows all. The God of Love knows nothing.
Side Quest (f)
11:05 (a f)
Feline Bliss (f)
Love at your fingertips (f)
Hotel check-ins (f)
make up sex (s)
Conversations with Minho (f)
sharing a bed series; Lee Know (s)
my moon and stars (f)
Fake Texts
Flirting with bsf+roommate!LeeKnow (f)
Borrowing Minho's Cat
Random Texts with bf!Minho (f s)
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mgg-81 · 4 days
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Bangchan Fic Recommendations
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a - angst f - fluff s - smut
⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ──── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆
One Shots
No Contact (a f) ⋆˙⟡♡ It was one of the worst car accidents the city has seen. You weren't supposed to be in that car, but you were. When you lose your memories from the incident, Chan is ordered to stay away for your recovery's sake; but it takes a larger toll on him than anyone could have imagined. Until one day, he just can't take it anymore.
you asked me to stay. [Not Yet]. (f) ⋆˙⟡♡ even if idols 'don’t date fans', there are no rules against a little bit of teasing, and so it happens that Mr Bang Chan here really likes your kind of thinking.
pieces of you (f a) ⋆˙⟡♡ In which you and chan are each other's missing pieces. Alternatively, Chris and his daughter come knocking at your apartment asking for flour, and he's no longer embarrassed when you open the door.
Kinktober Day 8 (s) ⋆˙⟡♡ Your family’s yearly vacation is here and once again, you’re single. To avoid having your dating life be poked and prodded by your relatives, you decide to turn your best friend for a little help. Everyone already knows him! What’s the worst that could happen if he pretends to be your boyfriend for the week?
let me in your ocean (a s f) ⋆˙⟡♡ In which Chan is a little self-conscious and a lot clueless, Changbin is his therapist and his wingman, and you get really sick of waiting for Chan to get his shit together.
Confessions of a Dirty Mind (s)
no nut november - bang chan (s)
Fake Texts
Texting Bangchan happy father's day
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mgg-81 · 4 days
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happy earth day! some gouache paintings I made inspired by this beautiful, lovely & blooming world!
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mgg-81 · 4 days
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10K notes · View notes
mgg-81 · 7 days
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Love Said To Soul | lmh
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❝𝐖𝐡𝐨 𝐚𝐫𝐞 𝐲𝐨𝐮?❞
↳ When the God of Love is tasked with humiliating a beautiful mortal girl, he finds himself much vexed to discover her immune to his skills. Determined to discover the root of the problem, he takes to mortal form and embarks upon a dastardly ruse that requires his getting close to her. The God of Love thinks he knows all. The God of Love knows nothing.
↳ Lee Know x female reader
↳ Enemies to lovers romance trope. A retelling of the Greek myth Eros and Psyche. College au, angst and conflict, developing romance and yearning, quest and high stakes, Greek mythology and frequent reference to gods/goddesses etc, fantasy and myth meets modern day, mild drug use, smut throughout.
! Explicit content, adult themes, 20.1k, suitable for 18+ readers only !
「Final part of the skz tropes collab w @yoongihan」 「main contents list」 「© April 2024 by jl-micasea-fics」
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“Thus, my dearest son, I charge you with this quest.”
Minho knelt reverently before his mother, head bowed low. Rarely did he question her whims or ways, for what the Goddess Aphrodite coveted, the Goddess Aphrodite claimed, and may the Fates help anyone who stood in her way, kin or otherwise.
Still; this all felt too bizarre.
“May I ask why, mother?”
Aphrodite smiled gently, her eyes—an infinite silvery galaxy of lovers’ souls—trained to him. As self-assured as he was, even Minho’s composure wavered under the gaze of the most apocalyptically beautiful of the twelve Olympians.
“It just seems like an awful lot of trouble to go to for a mortal girl,” he hastily added.
“You are correct, dear child. It is awful trouble. Trouble that I would not have you go to if it had not been ordained that this girl’s beauty will inspire a cult of worshippers that will revere her as the most beautiful creature to ever have lived. As more beautiful than even the Goddess of Love herself. They will make to her sacrifices and votive offerings and pray to her as though she is divine. I cannot have that, child. There is a natural order to things, and we must maintain it.”
Minho supposed that was answer enough.
“Relay to me again what you must do,” Aphrodite said.
“I am to go to her bedroom while she sleeps, and take with me a hog.”
“The hairiest and foulest you can find,” Aphrodite added.
“Yes, mother. I am to shoot her with one of my arrows and ensure that the first thing she sees when she awakes is the beast.”
Aphrodite smiled, her golden skin shimmering under the vast, heavenly sun. “She will fall in love with the monster, thus disgracing herself and ensuring that her Fate shall never come to pass. No mortal shall ever worship a pig-lover!” She laughed, melodic and triumphant.
Compassion in his very nature, Minho could not help but feel a sliver of sympathy for the girl that, for all intents and purposes, was innocent. She could no more control the beauty she was born with than her Fate— now it would be a sad and lonely one. She would be reviled by other mortals and mocked by the Gods, and spend her life in misery.
But an order was an order.
“Go now, my son,” Aphrodite commanded. “Take your bow and quiver, and make without delay to the girl.”
“Yes, mother.”
Minho stood, bowed, and from his divine palace retrieved his golden bow and quiver of enchanted arrows. Forged by Hephaestus and blessed by his mother, the arrows could pierce the heart of any mortal or deity with true, unbreakable love.
Such was his onus, his purpose, his charge as Eros.
--
Minho always enjoyed visiting the mortal world.
It was true that his reason for spending much of his time there pertained to the never-ending demands of love’s machinations, but even on the days when he sought to take a small break, he lounged in the warm waterfalls and on the snowy mountains and near the pellucid oceans, marvelling at the luscious spectacles of Mother Gaia— a different sort of ephemeral elegance to that of his heavenly home.
Mortals entertained him endlessly; such funny, flighty creatures. They warred and fucked and loved and killed and worked so hard for ultimately trivial reward. He often wondered what would have become of them, had Prometheus never gifted them fire. They certainly wouldn’t have built up centuries of civilisation and developed what Minho now overlooked from a wisp of cloud: the University of Oxford. So far as he understood it, this was a place where mortals gathered to learn— a little like the Mouseion, which he was admittedly less familiar with than he ought to have been. More importantly than any of that, however: this was where his charge resided.
Securing his bow and stepping off the cloud, he drifted down and over the sprawling campus on plush, white wings. The cool midnight air flowed through his onyx hair; starlight kissed his deep, rich complexion. A peaceful glide to the ground it would have been, had the ghastly pig strapped to his back not squealed for the duration.
Landing softly on the dewy lawn, Minho wriggled his naked toes on the grass and looked around. The building ahead, domed and Victorian in grand architecture, was signposted ‘Goodhart’. Being the dead of night, there was no sign of life from any of the single-paned windows; just as he had hoped. Invisible as he was to mortal eyes, the pig remained very much discernible. Nothing like a floating farm animal to incite panic.
With a short, sharp hop he glided gracefully up and away from the grass to the top floor, three stories up. Through each window he peered into dark rooms in which girls softly slumbered, until he came upon one that wasn’t: she was sat at her desk, illuminated by the amber glow of a tabletop lamp. Before her was spread textbooks and notepads, pencils and post-its, an open laptop and cold mug of coffee. Minho watched for several moments. She scrawled something to a cluttered page, tapped her laptop and scrolled. She dropped her pen and raised her arms, stretching out her spine and shoulders with satisfying cracks. She yawned and checked the time, then groaned: “Oh, god.” Her head fell to the desk with a heavy sigh.
Minho had counted on her being asleep. This was due to take much longer now that she wasn’t. Resigned to a wait of indeterminate length, he perched on the rooftop ledge above her window, pig tucked between his legs as he laid back and gazed up at the stars and constellations that decorated the now cloudless sky. There was Hercules, favourite son of Heracles, raised up to the heavens by the Cloud Gatherer himself in honour of his father’s legendary labours. There was Aries, the ram to whom the most coveted Golden Fleece once belonged. There was Andromeda, the wife of the great hero Perseus, who saved her from an unthinkable fate at the hands of the foul sea-dwelling monster Cetus. And in admiring these constellations and recounting the tales of ancient times gone by, Minho drifted into a contented sleep.
It was warmth on his skin that stirred him to the twitter of birds and chatter of mortals. Opening his eyes and rubbing them of their crust, he—for a moment—forgot entirely where he was. Indeed, it was the sore twinge to his skin that firstly informed him he was on Earth, and secondly, that he had Helios to thank for the sunburn. Immortality does not equal invulnerability. With a mean glare skywards, he clambered to his feet and stretched out his joints, possessively checking his bow, relieved to find it still where it should be.
It was at that moment that a wailing screech pierced the air, most alarmingly offensive to Minho’s sensitive ears. More commotion stirred and drew him closer; he crossed the ivy-laced rooftop of Goodhart House with nimble proficiency, peering down at the lawn where it seemed a dozen or more students had gathered.
“What do we do?!” He heard a girl cry out.
“Kill it!”
“We can’t kill it, idiot. It’s huge.”
“W— Well, just, get rid of it!”
“How do you suggest we do that?”
“Call security! Call someone!”
Intrigued, Minho hopped from the rooftop and fluttered to a nearby oak on whose thick branch he gently perched. From the gathering of girls, a familiar squeal and snort erupted: Minho froze. With a stroke of bewilderment, he looked down between his legs, then back to the lawn.
Shit.
The girls screamed and parted from their tight cluster as a splotchy, hairy hog barrelled towards them, slavering drool that splashed them as it passed. Over the lawn it charged and across the campus to yet more cries of distant fear and panic, until it disappeared entirely from view. Aflutter with confusion and fright, the girls drew back together, as though expecting yet more horrid creatures to spring from the ground. Luckily for them, Minho was fresh out. In fact, he was just considering where he might obtain a second beast when from the Goodhart building lobby, a girl strolled out. Confidence in her stride and an easy smile on her face, she was rushed by the gaggle of girls, every one of them relaying to her with varying degrees of dramatics what had just occurred. Minho watched intently; she laughed and hugged them, offered assurances and validation. By no small feat she managed to calm them, after which she took her leave, jogging across the lawn and towards the path with books bundled in her arms. Minho followed, from treetop to rooftop across campus until she entered where he could not, disappearing from his sight into a grand school building.
His mother had been right, he thought. She was beautiful; that was, for a mortal girl. After all, Minho had indulged with deities and nymphs the beauty (and flexibility) of which mortals could not utter into words, and so yes; she was beautiful, for a mortal girl. Rather astoundingly beautiful, for a mortal girl. But that was neither here nor there. He had a quest to complete, and was now distinctly lacking the beast required to complete it. He would just have to find another and bring it back. If not a hog, then something equally as detestable.
Something that would appease mother.
--
In the small and dark hours, Minho returned once more to Goodhart.
Pleased this time to see that the girl was slumbering soundly, he braced himself on the sill of the window and pushed it carefully. It gave with no resistance, as did all things he impressed upon. He climbed through it and into the girl’s room, and found himself immediately taken with what he caught wind of: the sweet and tantalising scent of honey— a substance that had something of a catnip-like appeal to Gods and deities in all forms. Minho paused, his mouth watering. The room itself was of no remarkable make: he had visited the habitats of mortal girls before, their comforts and wants manifesting in soft things, light things, warm things, pink things.
In his hand the creature he plotted with stirred and unsettled; he opened his palm and hushed the spindly tarantula softly. Besotted, it twitched its mandibles and allowed Minho to place it at the foot of the bedspread, where it waited. With a grace of movement unique to the Goddess of Love’s offspring, Minho drew his bow from his back and prepared an arrow, aiming at the sleeping girl. This was usually his favourite part; the anticipation, the thrill, watching how his efforts panned out in those few and rare seconds after his arrow struck and the love searched for a home. Perhaps that was why his heart hung heavily as he took a deep breath and loosed the arrow; in this, there was to be no thrill. He acted solely in service to his mother, and while other deities would surely press that that was ample reward in itself, something inside him ached.
Ever sure in its path, the arrow struck the girl in her breast, setting upon her a heat that woke her immediately. She gasped and made a sound akin to a moan: Minho stiffened, struck by it. She rubbed her eyes and sat up, her sleep-warm skin and bed hair appealing to him in ways he had erstwhile made fun of mortals for admiring. Groggy but seemingly able to perceive enough, she blinked at the end of her bed; at the patient tarantula that sat there. She shook her head, rubbed her eyes again, grimaced and took another look. The tarantula shimmied its eight legs. Certain that his mission had been a success, Minho could bear to watch no longer; he moved to the open window, braced himself upon the sill.
“How on earth did you get in here?”
He turned back. The girl rose carefully from bed and retrieved the glass of water from her bedside, rushing to the window where he stood. A mere inch from him and yet completely unaware, she tossed the water over the sill, the streaming moonlight briefly bathing her face. Minho swallowed and watched as she grabbed a slip of paper from her desk. With care and precise technique, she slipped the paper under the spider, poised the glass atop it, and trapped it.
“You don’t belong here,” she said softly, moving back to the window; back to Minho. “Here, little one. Go home safely now.”
Stretching across him, she leaned out to a gathering of strong ivy that crawled across the close facia. She released the creature onto it, smiling as it clicked its mandibles and scuttled away.
Several things crossed Minho’s mind as he held his breath and waited for the girl to move away. The first was that something, somewhere, had clearly gone awfully wrong. What just happened was not the work of a woman obsessively in love with a horrible spider, but rather that of a pitying Samaritan. The next thing he considered was perhaps more confounding than his failure: he had broken into a clammy sweat, his heart pounded, his vision swum with her nearness. The God of love loves all, loves unconditionally, loves fairly. He does not fall in love.
Thirdly and finally, he thought the worst of all.
He had failed his mother.
Aphrodite was not to be failed.
--
“What is it that you mean to tell me, exactly?”
Aphrodite sat poised on her regal throne of curved ram’s horns and silk, her infinite beauty radiating beneath her golden skin and through her calm, silvery eyes. Her hair, braided intricately and woven with wildflowers, seemed to throb and glow with the very essence of life and love. Minho knelt before her and summoned his courage.
“I mean to say, mother, that I failed.”
Aphrodite brought her palm to her chin. “I do not understand, dear child.”
“I failed to curse her, mother. It just... It didn’t work.”
“So you said. Therein lies my perplexment. You said your arrow struck her?”
“Yes, mother.”
“And yet she remained unaffected?”
“Yes, mother. She didn’t fall in love at all.”
“You must have missed.”
Minho looked up, about to voice his protest when Aphrodite spoke again, “The arrows of Eros cannot be defied. Whomsoever is struck by them must fall in love with the first creature they then see. That is, and always will be, the way of things.”
“But, mother—”
“You must go back down to Earth. Back to the girl. Make sure your aim is true this time.”
“Mother, it wasn’t my aim that was off, it was something else—”
“Are you suggesting there is a defect in Hephaestus’s weapon?” she asked. “Should we visit your uncle together and put this to him?”
Minho swallowed. “No, mother.”
Aphrodite smiled. “Very well then. It is decided. You shall go back to Earth and do a thorough job of things.”
Minho stood from his kneel, anxiety turning over in him. Whatever help he had sought to gain from his mother clearly wasn’t his to take, and so he would have to figure this one out on his own.
“And, darling?”
“Yes, mother?”
“Do not come back until the deed is done.”
Minho nodded dutifully, his heart sunk low.
“Yes, mother.”
--
Now, things were personal.
Not only had the mortal girl somehow resisted his arrows, embarrassed him in front of his mother—a woman whose opinion mattered to him above anyone—but she had also earned him effective banishment. There was no doubt in his mind that his mother’s warning was to be interpreted literally: he would not be allowed to return to heaven or his palace until his task was complete, and so what had begun as a run-of-the-mill task was now a quest of redemption. Minho simply despised working harder than he had to.
So, yes. This was personal.
The more he thought on it, the more he supposed his mother to be right. He must have missed. Yes, it looked an awful lot like he struck her clean in the breast— before this he’d have sworn his immortality on it. And yes, he had never been known to miss a shot, ever. And yes; she reacted as he had witnessed every other mortal react in the afterglow of the landing shot. But still. He must have missed. There could be no other explanation.
Resigned to a third attempt, Minho returned at night to Goodhart. This time, he would watch a while longer. He most definitely wouldn’t take to the (rather comfortable) rooftop and admire the constellations; this was serious business, and he ought to treat it as such. Gliding up to her window and perching on the exterior sill, he was surprised to see the room empty. It was late: late enough for most mortals to be going about their quaint evening routines, such as they were. The desk lamp was switched on and a gathering of clothes was strewn about the unkempt bed alongside an open, transparent toiletry bag. A closed laptop balanced atop the bedside table, where also rested stacked books of romance fiction. White, fluffy slippers peeked out from beneath the bed’s skirt, the small wardrobe door had been left ajar. It was curiosity that drove him to crack open the window, and from inside he once again caught the delectable scent that had so tempted him the night before: honey. It warmed him and made his mouth water, the sweet notes inspiring a rumble in his gut that he mentally hushed—as though it could be heard—when the door opened and the girl walked in. Robed in merely a thin towel, her hair wet about her shoulders, he held his breath and gawked. Something about her—something he couldn’t explain but most desperately wished to—was inexplicably appealing. On her entrance the smell of sweet nectar strengthened, and Minho widened the gap in the window to steal a stronger whiff. She shivered and wrapped her arms about herself, glancing to the window that, to her mind, was swinging loosely.
“Thought I’d closed you,” she mumbled, crossing the room and leaning again into Minho’s space. His heart thumped as she reached out to close it: confoundingly annoying, but what good was it to deny?
And then, something quite unfathomable happened.
She froze mid-reach, and stared at Minho.
--
You had never been the type to much believe in fairy tales, myth or folklore.
Being a student of the arts, you were aware enough that such tales were always a product of their time and culture, born to serve one purpose or another. Urban legends to keep folk from the woods at night, fables to sow the seeds of conformity, myths to elevate men to the status of Gods, for hubris and ambition does much to produce good literature.
So does insanity, for its part, and that was precisely what you felt to be stewing in as you looked upon the barely corporeal form of a creature—a man? —perched daintily on your windowsill. He was naked save for a thin white skirt that seemed not to touch him, but float about him. A broad and firm chest tapered to a svelte waist and thick, muscled thighs. Hair of impossible black framed features that you could not entirely comprehend for their beauty, and as though to that end, his face remained a blur save for the shimmering silver of eyes that stared back. A pair of feathery, white wings closed around and under him, and this, you promptly decided, could not be real. If you were to touch him, he would disappear. And so you reached out, hand trembling and warming the nearer you got, as though pushing your arm into a pocket of hot steam. The angel(?) watched, statuesque, and as the very tips of your fingers grazed the smooth upper chest that you were sure you would simply pass through, a pop erupted, as though piercing a vacuum. An extraordinary bout of colour bloomed and spread across his skin, the opaque veil giving way to an iridescent, dazzling gold that shimmered and sparked under the moonlight, yet where your fingers had touched was a deep, purple blotch— a scar on perfection. His features cleared and you saw him with perfect clarity: sharp yet feminine, strikingly gorgeous with plush lips and strong brow. Like nothing you’d ever seen; nothing that ever should be seen. Despite your wants you cried out in shock, recoiled, and slammed the window shut. The angel flitted from the sill, great wings beating gracefully as it hovered for but a moment, spun around, and darted away into the night.
Sleep did not come that night.
Nor did the angel, ever again.
--
She saw him.
She tried to touch him.
Never in all his centuries had Minho experienced such a thing, and were he not on such frosty terms with his mother, he would have turned to her for advice, for he found himself utterly confounded.
A mortal girl saw him.
Had a part of him somehow broken? Was she not mortal after all? Had there been some cosmic imbalance that simply happened to allow for the veil between worlds to thin with comically inopportune timing? Minho had no answers, and knew his frantic worrying would produce none. Thus, he resolved to a plan. The way he saw it, all attempts made so far had depended on his stealth and gentile as Eros, God of Love. Therefore, perhaps a different approach was called for; an approach that would put him in direct contact with the girl that he might work her out— he would have to if he hoped to curse her and appease his mother. Working in the shadows had earned him nothing but a headache.
It was time to step into the light.
--
The Oxford university cafeteria was not a place one went to eat their lunch.
No; the cafeteria was a grand old affair more fitting the pages of Hogwarts, and was treated as such. A hub of activity for passing students that would meet between lectures or seminars to spread the campus gossip like Burberry-clad town criers. It amused you to play a small part in it; you would listen when the girls from your house clucked and fussed over the slightest thing that, if nothing else, distracted from the general stresses of undergraduate life. Ever aware of the way you carried yourself—mother had made sure to drill that one down since birth—you received all news with a complacent smile, unaffected.
Such was the plan today— to pass through on your way to your next class, touch base with the latest triviality, and carry on your day. Yet as you stepped into the high-ceilinged cafeteria and looked around, something struck you as distinctly different.
The whole place was abuzz, humming with chatter and the excited exclamations. Students gathered tightly around the benches and tables, those newly arrived being swarmed upon by peers that sought to be the first to tell them the great news: news you would soon come into possession of.
“Hey!” Your good friend and classmate, Gina, called to you. “Over here!”
You rushed to her, backpack tight to your shoulder. “What on earth’s going on?” you asked. “Half the student body must be here.”
“Girl, you haven’t heard?”
“Haven’t heard what?”
“Oh my God—” She turned to the girl behind her, tapped her shoulder. “She hasn’t heard yet!”
The girl gasped. “You haven’t?! Everyone’s talking about it!”
“Talking about what?”
“I can’t believe you haven’t—”
“Gina.” You pinned her with a stern glare. “Tell me what’s going on.”
Gina drew closer, her voice no lower despite the closed distance as she said, “There’s a new student.”
“A... What? Is that it?”
“He’s not just any student,” she added.
“I heard his biological mother owns Gucci,” a nearby girl added.
“I heard he’s a self-made billionaire,” said another.
“You’re both wrong. He’s the Dean’s son,” Gina tutted.
You held a hand up, head spinning. “Wait. Time out. All this fuss is over a new student?”
“Gucci heir.”
“Billionaire!”
“Dean’s son—”
You rolled your eyes at the objecting chorus. “Whatever. He’s still just a student.”
Gina shook her head. “You clearly haven’t met him.”
“I don’t need to meet him.”
“Oh yeah?” Gina stared over your shoulder. “That’s too bad, because you’re about to.”
You followed her gaze, as did every other student present. The cafeteria burst into a fuss of noise, whispered elation and an air of giddy delight that infected even you with the way your heart pounded indiscriminately. Through a convenient gap in the crowd you looked across to the gently swinging double doors where a person had just entered: a man. A man that met your eyes as soon as yours did his, through tinted sunglasses that utterly failed to conceal the liquid mercury beneath. Under your skin bloomed a molten wanting unlike anything hitherto felt, and in the next breath, a dizzy spell of desire. Mid-length hair the colour of onyx and skin near unsettlingly flawless, it felt merciful to look away from him; to right yourself and steady your feet. Leather jacket tight about his broad shoulders, the man grinned and with no more than a single stride attracted to him the swarm of students that each sought to introduce themselves and make friendly, Gina included. At home amongst the chaos, the man took it all in and with apparent gratitude, unphased by the riot he incited. It took all possible strength to turn and briskly cross the cafeteria, the more distance put between you and them, the better.
Outside and with the summer sun offering a calming warmth of clarity to your head and shoulders, you diverted from the path to the lawn and stopped near a willow tree for breath. It had been all too much. All too reminiscent of your own experience as a naïve Fresher— how the ‘hottest girl on campus’ had been so violently hitched to her pedestal.
“Hello.”
With a shriek you whirled around: there he was. Sunglasses removed and sitting backwards on his head, silver pools of liquid metal pinned you from under strands of thick black.
“Wh— What?”
The man smiled; white, dazzling. “I said hello.”
“Hello?”
“Isn’t that what people say when they meet for the first time?”
You shook your head, scrambling for sense. The shadow of the leafy canopy above danced over the grass, disorienting. As though nature itself responded to his very presence as your peers did.
“But this...” You swallowed, summoned the nerve to look at him. “This isn’t the first time we’ve met.”
--
Minho’s ichor ran cold— a first for a man whose heavenly blood was perpetually warmed by divinity.
“We’ve never met,” he said flatly, as much to convince himself as her.
In truth, he thought she’d be purged of the memory of that murky evening by now, humans so fickle in their recollection. It had been over a week ago. She blinked, the dazzlement in her eyes such that it made Minho wonder if his mortal shell was sufficient in containing his glorious beauty.
“I know you,” she muttered. “I know your face.”
Minho’s heart throbbed.
“I thought it was a dream, but—”
Seeing an opportunity, he leapt at it. “Funny,” he smarmed. “People do like to tell me I’m the stuff of dreams.”
And just like that, she appeared to snap to herself. She grimaced and turned away, starting over the lawn.
“It’s rude to walk away from someone without even asking their name,” he said, keeping up with her.
“I already know your name.”
“Oh yeah?”
“Yes. It’s all anyone in the cafeteria was saying.”
He laughed. “You sound upset about that.”
“Not nearly as upset as I am about being followed.”
“You could always ask me why I’m following you.”
She stopped abruptly and huffed, “Why are you following me, Minho?”
Never had a mortal addressed him by human name— it felt somehow more intimate than the acts he’d indulged in a hundred times or more.
He cleared his throat, stood tall. “You’re the student superintendent for Goodhart, yes?”
She cast a wary eye over him. “I am.”
From his pocket, he retrieved a small, silver key with a wooden tag attached. The number on the tag read ‘307’.
“I’m moving in,” he beamed.
It was her turn to laugh; melodic and bright. Somehow cutting. “Goodhart is a girl’s only house,” she said.
“It was.”
“Excuse me?”
“It was a girl’s only house. Up until about six hours ago.”
“I don’t follow.”
“Cool. You don’t need to. I just need you to show me to my room. It’s this way, right?”
He started off over the lawn, hands in jacket pockets, thoroughly pleased with himself. With a little luck (and maybe an offering or two to his mother), things would continue to go according to plan. He’d have this mortal worked out and trussed up in love with a snake before teatime.
How pleased Aphrodite would be.
--
It was all so wrong.
How was it that a centuries-long tradition could be so readily abandoned for the sake of a rich boy that apparently possessed more connections than the London underground?
Walking briskly down the halls of Goodhart—halls that you had come to love for their quirky colourings and touch of lived-in neglect—you nursed the mortification that swirled about you. It didn’t help that every girl you passed looked on Minho with abject delight and warm welcomes; he was already at home in a place he had no business calling home.
You pointed down the third-floor hall from the top of the connecting staircase.
“Your room is down there,” you said. “On the left.”
Minho hummed. “Cool. Let’s go.”
“I have a lecture.”
You spun on your heel and started down the stairs, only for the man to jump into your path.
“Don’t you have to give me some kind of induction?” he pressed. “As the superintendent, it’s only right you tell me where the fire exits are.”
A hot whirl of irritation barely suppressed the urge to tell him where he could stick his fire exits: you forced a smile instead, and nodded.
“Right. Sure. This way, then.”
Heading down the third-floor hall with him in close pursuit, you began upon a cold realisation. Perhaps the onslaught of emotion had befuddled you enough that you completely missed what was easily the most horrifying thing of all this: room 307 was next to yours.
Minho was your neighbour.
You stopped outside 307’s door. “This is it.”
Minho grinned. “Excellent.”
He took the key from his pocket and unlocked it, stepping inside what was a typical space for university accommodation. A modestly sized room with nothing more than a desk and bed supplied. It fell to the students to make it theirs, so to speak. The white-framed window looked out to the summery lawn, just as yours did. He strolled inside, hands in his leather jacket pockets, peered out of the window and inspected the ceiling, the bed and then you. 
“Fire exits are at both ends of the hall,” you quickly said from the door. “And there’s an emergency escape connected to 301. Got it?”
“Yes. Thank you.”
“There’s no curfew and, uh,” you cleared your throat. “No rules on who you can bring back and such. Just remember you’re not the only one who lives here.”
He scanned you coolly. “I’m well aware of that.”
“Good. Well, then.” With a curt nod, you went to leave.
“You’re 306, aren’t you?”
You stopped short, seized with disbelief. “What?”
“You live next door,” he repeated. “We’re neighbours.”
“H— How do you even know that?”
Minho shrugged. “Am I not supposed to know?”
Confounded, you were lost for words. He strolled leisurely around the bed.
“You’re popular on campus,” he said. “I hear people talking about you.”
“Really?” You scoffed. “I’m shocked you could hear anything beyond what everyone seems to be saying about you.”
“It’s funny,” he continued, ignorant of your remark.
“What is?”
“That they say so much about you without actually saying a thing.”
“I don’t follow.”
“Well,” he sighed, perching on the bare mattress. “They say you’re beautiful. Gorgeous, even. That you’ve got an ass to die for and a killer smile.” He raked his gaze over you. “You’re the hottest girl on campus.”
“They can say what they want, I really don’t care. I’m used to it.”
“Right. But it’s all so... vapid. Don’t you think? There’s no substance to it. Seems to me like not a single one of them actually know you. They just know you for what they see. They’re not interested in peering beneath the tight ass and lovely smile.”
You stared at a patch on the brown carpet.
“Is that their fault, or yours?” he asked.
“I’m done with this conversation,” you snapped, turning back to the door.
“I heard about the Fresher’s ball.”
You stopped and swallowed, heat warming your face. “The Fresher’s ball was a mistake.”
“Yeah. You would say that. Getting so drunk you made out with the entire rugby team?”
“That’s not true,” you snapped. “I got drunk, yes, and I know I made a fool of myself, but nothing like that happened. It’s just a nasty rumour.”
Minho shrugged. “Not for me to judge, darling.” He pursed his lips, then added, “Regardless, your peers seem to adore you. The way you look, anyway.”
“Are you done? I don’t know who the hell you think you are but my life is not a soap that you can just tune into for your own amusement. I don’t care what people say about me; I never have.” You turned away from him. “Leave me alone.”
And with an abrupt slam of his door, you left his room to rush to your own. In the solitude and quiet and after deep breaths taken to ease the dreaded panic that had begun to sink in, it was to your own irritation that tears pricked and streaked your cheeks. Nothing he had said was new; you were aware enough of the reason boys smiled at you and girls flocked to you, somehow hoping your acclaimed ‘beauty’ might rub off on them in however shallow a manner. Such had always been the way of things, ever since you were young. Overfamiliar uncles cooing at your pretty face, jealous aunts shunning you. High school friends lost to petty crushes that turned eyes on you, strangers that stared and whispered. You had hoped for a new start with the chapter of university, and for a while, things had been better. You’d been just another student of low profile, had kept to yourself, had protected your peace.
All until the damn Fresher’s ball.
One moment of weakness and indulgence in excess had ruined it: all eyes had a reason to turn to you as you revelled and danced with more suggestive intonation than you would ever have otherwise dared, and they hadn’t turned away since. Rumours abounded of your state and activity after the ball, ranging from those Minho had heard and of far more explicit affairs, none of them true. Unwilling to dig to the root of the whispers, you simply turned away from it, choosing above all else to carry yourself the way you had always done under lustful eyes: with quiet dignity.
Who was this man to throw all that in your face? To so brazenly trample on your boundaries? Whether Dean’s son or Gucci heir or self-made billionaire, it was clear he possessed an appalling level of entitlement, and was someone to be avoided. Just what he hoped to gain from such rash treatment of a stranger, you couldn’t be sure, but promptly decided it was not worth your energy to work out.
You would carry yourself the way you had always done.
--
The mystery of Minho’s identity prevailed for longer than you cared to acknowledge.
He hefted his wants around campus with reckless abandon, and by now it was certain that you were the only one mourning the all-female occupation of Goodhart House, for the other girls were nothing but pleased by the male addition.
Indeed, neither an eye was blinked nor a question asked as to his means of securing a place at Goodhart, much less Oxford on the whole. The man seemed to don the shroud of myth— every word passed around and about him painted a thrilling picture: he was everything the students wished him to be and more, for never once did he deny a rumour. An image forged in gossip is one susceptible to warping, and if Minho played into that, it was lost on the student body. Rather, he was welcomed with more abject favouritism than you had ever witnessed; you might have drowned in the second-hand embarrassment of your peers if not for the glowering contempt you stewed in upon for the fact that the detestable man was now your neighbour.
And yes, you were self-aware enough to admit a pull of attraction that you kept as close to your pride as your dignity. You’d rather be seen dead than join the gaggle of groupies that worshipped his every move and hung on his every word.
Thus far, you had done a stalwart job of avoiding him. A fortnight with no run-ins had confirmed that, inasmuch as you could tell, you had no classes together nor crossover seminars, no reason to interact. Yet through all this, the glimpses you would catch of his jet-black head and the trill of his laughter from next door provoked an unease: what was this familiarity you felt? Why were you the only one that seemed to notice how his eyes shimmered with the light of a cosmos?
Best to put it out of your mind, lest your mind put out of you.
On the Friday evening you nursed your well-loved copy of Wuthering Heights, contemplating between long paragraphs just what Heathcliff’s redeeming qualities were intended to be. While all for reading between the lines, it seemed to you that any virtue of character should not be so difficult to find.
Situated comfortably on the inner sill of your bedroom window and looking out, it was another fair night. The moon hung bright and clear over the distant woods and town of Oxford, the sky utterly clear of a cloud. Perhaps it had been a cloud that night, that you saw. A cloud in the form of an angel, sent to you by sleep deprivation and an overdose of caffeine.
A knock on your door drew your attention; supposing it would be one of the regular girls stopping by to regale you with their Friday night antics, you rushed over and threw it open.
How your heart seized in your chest.
Eyes of mercury assessed you from under damp raven strands.
“Good evening,” Minho said.
Too bewildered to much reply, he breathed a soft laugh at your dazzlement.
“May I come in?”
“What?”
“Can I come in?” he asked again, emphasising a glance into your room that reared a bout of self-consciousness.
“N— No. Go away.”
“I come with offerings,” he said, tapping the plastic Tupperware box tucked under his arm that had somehow gone unnoticed. “Fudge brownies. A little birdie told me they’re your favourite.”
You folded your arms defensively. “Did they now?”
Minho cocked a brow. “They were wrong?”
“N— No. I suppose not.”
He grinned, utterly disarming. “I feel like you and I got off on the wrong foot, so to speak,” he said gently. “I’d like to start again. Get to know each other. Clean slate. We’re neighbours, after all.”
“I don’t think—”
He held the Tupperware box up. “Please?”
You huffed an indignant sigh.
Might have to strangle a birdie or two.
--
Minho had no experience with human narcotics.
Indeed, the closest divine equivalent was the concoction of ambrosia, and that—if the Sky Father’s behaviour was anything to judge by—induced the sort of buzz that mortals gained from an excess of wine. There was no substance in heaven or on Earth that could so impact the Gods the way he had seen man-made narcotics impact humans; though he desired no such extremity tonight. He had simply taken the advice of those keen mortals that surrounded him, given when he had subtly enquired as to the real nature of his target: “She’s uptight, man. Super hot, but uptight. She needs to relax, smoke a little. It’ll help her unclench. Man, can you imagine her high? No, yeah, I know she doesn’t smoke, but like— She likes brownies, right? She always buys those little fudge ones from the cafeteria. I’d love to see her eat a moon cake. I bet she’d get totally wild, just like that one time at the ball.”
Thus, a plan emerged.
Stepping into her room was the first hurdle overcome: he had been fully braced for a door slam to the face. Instead, he found himself pleasantly surprised, and then somewhat concerned, for it was clear by now that that not even his mortal disguise could completely conceal his divine appeals from her. Where other mortals saw a dark and handsome man, she saw beyond it. The way she stared and how her heartbeat quickened told of it all. Worse still that he seemed to respond in kind— but no, he could not even entertain it. His visit carried a purpose, and that was to get to the bottom of what made her so special.
“Nice place,” he said as he looked briefly around, not to impress discomfort upon the girl.
“Thanks. It’s the same as every other in this building.”
Minho chuckled. She was possessed of a sense of humour, at least.
“You were reading?” he asked, idly flipping the cover of Wuthering Heights that sat on the bedside table. He hadn’t read it himself, but recalled the sister Muses’s boasts from the time of its inception: what promising devotees they claimed those Bronte’s would be.
“Yeah.”
“A touch on the heavy side for a Friday night, no?”
She shrugged, arms wrapped around herself. “I like it.”
“You read a lot?”
“I mean; yeah. English Lit student.”
“Ah. A romantic, then.”
“I wouldn’t say that.”
“All arts students are romantics, darling.”
He sat at the foot of the bed, Tupperware box in his lap, quietly pleased with how her heart sounded to have skipped a beat at the endearment.
“Join me?” he asked, tapping the space at his side.
She cleared her throat and swallowed, moving stiffly to the desk where she pulled out the chair. Minho watched in amusement, but did not contest. He snapped open the Tupperware box to the velvety rich scent of chocolate, humming in delight: a deity he might be, but just as susceptible to the serotonin of indulgent food. Neatly sliced brownies sat on paper towel, and he offered the box to her first. She eyed it warily.
“They’re just brownies,” he lied.
A purse of her lips and she contemplated something: whatever it was, it quickly passed.
“Thank you,” she sighed, dipping into the box and retrieving the topmost brownie.
“You’re welcome, darling.”
Minho helped himself to one, wishing almost that he could join the girl on the trip she was about to take. It’d be fun to witness, nonetheless. With inhibitions lowered and her true state of mind brought to the forefront, he’d surely discover what it was that blessed her so. What it would take to make her fall in love with the most horrible thing he could find. What he had to do to—
“Mhm.”
A small but sure groan of appreciation made Minho’s fine hairs stand on end: he paused his own consumption to watch her, her face aglow with warm delight. Chocolate on her lips begged to be illicitly removed; Minho swallowed, yearning thrumming under his skin.
“Is this why everyone on campus adores you?” she asked after a moment.
“W— What?”
“You bribe them,” she said, pointedly glancing to the Tupperware box.
Minho scoffed. “I don’t need to bribe people into liking me. It comes naturally.”
“Does your modesty come naturally too?”
“You know; you’re awfully abrasive with me. Did I do something to offend you?”
She shrugged, took another bite of brownie. “No. You’re not that powerful.”
He smirked. “Then what is it?”
“I suppose I just don’t understand.”
“Understand what?”
“You.” She licked her lips. “Nothing about you seems real. There are so many rumours about you and you don’t deny or correct a single one.”
He quirked a brow. “You think I should?”
“I think anyone that puts any value in their identity should, yes. I have a past. A home. I know where I came from and who I am. If I heard people saying otherwise, I'd want to put them right about it.”
She licked her fingers, one by one, the sweet and tempting chocolate coating her tongue. Minho crossed his legs.
“Tell me about them,” he said.
“Excuse me?”
“Tell me about your past. Your home. Where you came from and who you are.”
“We weren’t talking about me—”
“We are now.”
She blinked, swallowing the last bite of brownie and, once again, darted her tongue out over shiny lips. Minho followed the movement of it slowly, wondered how sweet she’d be to kiss, drew his attention back to her eyes where she, too, had been watching him. She cleared her throat abruptly.
“I, uh...” She shrugged a shoulder. “Well. I was born in a small village. There was nothing much to do growing up, so I read a lot. Too much, my mother used to say. She never really understood why I liked it, and I never really had the energy to explain.”
Minho nodded. “What did your parents do?”
“Mum was an artist. A sculptor, mostly, though she did paint too.”
“And your father?”
“I never knew him.”
“Never?”
She shook her head.
“Your mother didn’t tell you anything about him?” he pressed.
“Nothing I could have believed.”
“Such as?”
“It’s not even worth talking about—”
“Humour me.”
She hummed. “Well, she... I mean, you have to understand that Mum wasn’t a well woman. She had strange beliefs. Acted oddly. It got worse as she got older. Towards the end, not a thing she said made sense. She told me that...” She hesitated.
“Go on,” Minho encouraged.
“She said that my father was a god. As in; an actual god. He pursued her relentlessly, apparently. Sent her gifts and showered her with affection. Was obsessed with her. Eventually she caved and fell in love with him, then they made me, but he had to return to... wherever the hell he came from. I don’t know.”
Minho’s palms grew clammy; he set the Tupperware box on the bed. “I see.”
“I told you; she was completely delusional.” She stood and reached for another brownie, breaking a piece off and popping it into her mouth. “The story changed every time. Sometimes he came to her as a man, sometimes as a snake, or a stallion. For all her berating of my reading, she had a wicked imagination of her own.” She swallowed the brownie piece, broke off another. “I’m pretty sure he was just someone from the village. I really don’t care either way.”
Minho did not hear much of what was said after— he couldn’t over the rush of ichor that deafened him. It could not be true: it made no sense to be true.
“As for who I am,” she continued, oblivious. “I’m nothing special.”
“I very much contest that.”
She scoffed, breaking off yet more brownie and eating it. “You don’t know me even nearly well enough.”
“I’d like to,” he said.
She eyed him. “Why?”
“Why not? Can't we get to know each other?”
“Alright then,” she smacked her lips, set the brownie chunk aside and dusted her hands against each other. “Your turn. Dispel the illusion for me.”
Minho chuckled. What earlier cold dread had settled on him began to thaw.
“I could just feed you a pack of lies,” he said.
“You could.”
He held her gaze, the dim moonlight streaking her features.
“Swear that you won’t,” she muttered.
 Swear? To swear was to forge an oath; to forge an oath was divine. Under normal circumstances he would shy away from such a hefty obligation, but this...
“Alright.” He nodded. “I swear.”
With a slight smile, she asked, “Where’s home?”
“Far from here.”
“Where do you come from?”
“I was born in the mountains.”
“You swore you wouldn’t lie.”
“I’m not.”
She pursed her lips. “Okay... Who are you, Lee Minho?”
“I am the God of Love, sent to Earth by my mother Aphrodite to curse you for being too beautiful.”
She blinked, her shoulders drawn tight. A moment of tense silence passed, and in the next instant, she burst into laughter, doubling over herself on the chair. She cackled and guffawed until she cried, and Minho found himself not only enraptured with the sound of her joy, but elated at being the cause of it. If indeed, he truly was.
“It’s a zero for originality,” she whimpered on a laugh. “You can’t just steal my stories like that and twist them!”
Minho watched in amusement.
“Also— you promised no lies. That’s an even bigger zero.”
She picked up the last chunk of brownie she’d set aside, pushing it past her lips with a giggle that carried for long minutes as she chewed contentedly. She swallowed and sighed, brought her legs up to cross under her, swivelling gently in the desk chair.
“Imagine being the God of Love,” she mumbled. “Must be bloody awful.”
Minho hummed. “You think so?”
“Yeah. For sure. Imagine being surrounded by love all the time— every second of every minute of every day.” She shuddered dramatically. “Couldn’t be me.”
“But you are surrounded by love,” he said. “It takes many different forms, you know. Friends, family, faith.”
“Yeah. I guess.”
“Fornication.”
She coughed suddenly, looking anywhere but at him. Endearing warmth pooled under the simmering yearning that resided in Minho; how much longer he could keep it wrested, he wasn’t sure.
“I imagine being a God of Love to be great fun,” he said. “I imagine they might get into all sorts of mischief.”
“I don’t like mischief.”
“Everybody likes a bit of mischief.”
She shook her head. “Not me. I’d much rather—” She yawned. “I’d much rather live a quiet life.”
Minho hummed, watching as she wilted on her seat. She sat bolt upright on feeling herself sag, blinking rapidly.
“I don’t, uh...” She put a hand to her forehead. “I don’t think I feel very well.”
“What’s wrong, darling?”
“I...” She slipped her legs from under her, made an attempt to stand that ended futilely; Minho quickly rose and caught her weight. To restrain what burned in him; what the God of Love so easily took when the urges presented, was a goliath task.
“S— Sorry,” she mumbled, and tried to move from him, only to stagger once more.
“I’ve got you,” he said. “Want to lie down?”
“No. I just—” She gripped his arms tightly, let herself lean into his strong frame. The thin cotton of clothing under her hands seemed to fascinate her; she released the grip and, transfixed, began to stroke softly, her touch wandering from bicep to shoulder to chest. Minho hoped she could not feel the way his heart throbbed under her hand; she looked up at him, eyes glassy and rounded with adoration.
“You are... so pretty,” she mumbled, touching softly his cheek, his jaw. “So, so pretty.”
Heat flared under his skin, singing what sense he possessed.
“I thought you—” She grinned lazily. “I thought you were the angel. It came to me, you know. Right to my window. It was the prettiest thing I've ever seen. Then I saw you.”
He sucked in a sharp breath; much more praise and the swelling in his groin would not be so ignored.
She cupped his face with warm hands. “I don’t really like you. But I do like you. You make me—” She narrowed her eyes, blinked slowly. “You make me want to do things I’ve never even thought about before. Bad things.”
“Bad things?”
She nodded, then pressed a finger to his lips. “I’ll never admit that to you, though. Just so you know.”
The already abused thread of Minho’s self-control frayed and worried; he gently removed her hand, took her wrists in hold. To remove himself was the wise thing to do; she was not herself, and he was not so virtuous as to resist much longer.
 “It’ll be our secret, then,” he said.
“Mhm.”
“Why don’t you lie down for a bit, darling? You’re not feeling well.”
“I’m fine.”
“Of course. Just try it. For me.”
She shook her head, about to protest when in the next instant, a sallow and sickly look of panic came over her.
“I— I think I’m going to be—”
And with a short, retching heave, she threw up over Minho’s slippers, sweats and the rest of the brownies in the open Tupperware box.
There was hardly a shred of grace to be found in the rest of the evening, the responsibilities of caregiver taken on board. Minho cleaned both of them up, set the girl to bed with surprising lack of resistance on her part, and once sure that she was free of cramps and convulsions, retired himself to the roof of Goodhart.
Wired and utterly unable to sleep, he watched the constellations until he could think without the red mist of lust impeding him. In doing so, the cold realisation he had earlier felt on hearing her mother’s story returned to him. He would not have entertained it had the finer details not rung so true to a certain Olympian King and Cloud Gatherer’s famous behaviour. Indeed, it would certainly explain her invulnerability to his arrows and her uncanny intuition as to Minho’s nature: not much would escape a daughter of Zeus.
But then; if true, how had it gone unnoticed by Aphrodite? Surely she would know of the girl’s lineage. Surely all Olympians would know, for Zeus made no secret of his bastards and indeed, cultivated a long line of offspring from mortals, demi-gods, minor deities and nymphs all, much to Hera’s (equally as famous) wrath.
He would think on it, he decided. If nothing else, he was further along in working her out than he had been several hours ago, and with no thanks to the moon cakes. A stupid idea, to attempt to relax her through such unpredictable means in the hopes she might talk or reveal some mystery.
He would apologise tomorrow. Perhaps find her a gift.
All for the quest, of course.
--
You awoke feeling distinctly like a beaten piñata.
Your head throbbed steadily and a nausea lingered, rolling dangerously on your attempt to get up and out of bed. Trudging to the window, you threw it open and gulped in the fresh mid-morning air, warmed by summer’s sun and redolent of the nearby woods, earthen and faintly floral. A musk hung about your room; not one that was generally familiar to you, but it was reminiscent of the night before; of a sudden drowsy warmth and hands touching things they most definitely shouldn’t have. With a grimace and under the chill of mortification, you got dressed and tried to make presentable, quietly leaving your room and heading next door.
A deep breath preceded your soft knock: for a moment you thought it too soft to be heard, but it quickly opened to reveal a shower-fresh, modern-day Adonis— not even your sickly state could perturb the way you stared. A wet towel was slung over his sloped shoulders, the twisted ends hanging over curved pectorals. The rest of him was entirely naked, his skin still wet and catching the gentle light of the morning that shone in streaks through the half-drawn blinds. Dripping, dark strands framed rosy, handsome features. Veined biceps flexed as he held the door, and following the line of his body, you saw a wave of slight abs, svelte waistline, shapely hips, a fine dusting of hair that crept from his groin to his navel; a happy trail, so delightful as to make your mouth water.
As for what hung between his legs— well, it seemed to you on first glance that he possessed three of them.
Minho cleared his throat, apparently as mystified as you.
“H— Hi.”
“Sorry—” You snapped back to yourself. “Jesus. Sorry. I, uh— I’ll come back.”
“No, don’t. Just give me a second?”
He quickly disappeared, though left the door ajar, the sounds of rummaging and changing heard. When he reappeared, he was mercifully clothed in sweats and a black shirt.
“Come in,” he said.
“I... I really can come back if it’s a bad time—”
“It’s not. Come in.”
Compliance came courtesy of his authoritative tone, and in stepping into his room, you were surprised to see it so sparse. Aside from the wardrobe and larger than average bed, there was nothing that denoted even an ounce of personality; no posters, no books, no belongings. Nothing to suggest it was even lived in at all, if not for the presence of the man himself.
“I haven’t had time to decorate yet,” he said intuitively.
You nodded, though quietly doubtful, and wandered to the open window where at least you could call on the fresh air to keep you grounded. While clothed, he was no less dazing to be around.
“I just wanted to—”
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
You shrugged. “Not great.”
Minho, holding position at the other side of the room, looked downtrodden.
“Nothing a few paracetamols won’t fix, I'm sure,” you added lightly.
He shook his head. “I’m sorry.”
“What? I’m the one that should be apologising, I behaved like a—”
“You have nothing to apologise for. You were only like that because of me. It’s my fault.”
Confused, you watched as he came closer, raked a hand through his slowly drying hair.
“There was, uh...” He licked his lips. “There was marijuana in the brownies.”
Dumbfounded, you could only blink.
“I thought they might loosen you up,” he continued.
“Loosen me up?”
“It was a stupid, ridiculous idea. I know that. I’m so sorry. If I'd known how badly you’d react to it—”
“You drugged me!?”
Minho flinched. “I... I wouldn’t put it quite like that.”
“That's what it is, Minho. You drugged me. You fed me drugs without my knowledge or consent. I’ve never taken any kind of drug, let alone eaten it. You—” Too enraged to find the words, you gesticulated wildly. “Fuck. You.”
Storming past him with a succinct shoulder barge, Minho caught you by the wrist, an earnest apology on his gorgeous face.
“I’m so sorry, darling. It was never my intention to hurt you.”
A wave of bitter resentment accompanied the heat; you snatched away from him, summoning your courage.
“I’m not your darling.”
He caught your other wrist, persistent.
“You could be,” he said.
“Let me go—”
“You like me."
A concoction of embarrassment and want swam around you. “Looks like you can’t keep a secret, either,” you muttered.
And with that, he released you, his silvery gaze dropping in something finalistic; something defeated.
“Stay away from me,” you said flatly.
He did not stop your third attempt at exit, nor did he call on you for the rest of the day.
Nor the rest of the week.
--
It was difficult for a God to experience guilt.
Minho, being a creature of compassion and with love built into his very existence, found that it tarnished everything he hitherto enjoyed about the mortal world. As though being forced to swallow his pride and admit that he had made a mistake was not bad enough, there was the added realisation that he had acted detrimentally to his own quest— she would not even look at him, let alone allow him to get close enough to make amends, to lower guard, to give him opportunity to strike.
And so ensued a cold war of sorts, her avoidance of him going to such lengths as to involve her temporary removal from Goodhart House to stay with a friend on the other side of campus. This ‘Gina’—the girl upon whom she’d imposed—struck Minho as a fickle creature, susceptible to gossip and vapid trends and student body politics insofar as their theatrics. Not a good influence, he ultimately surmised, but nonetheless his target appeared fond of her. Trusted her. To that end, Minho saw an angle. A new opportunity. One that he somewhat wished to have happened upon before he decided on the use of narcotics, but hindsight would do him no good now.
It was as Gina left her last class of the day that Minho sought to introduce himself.
“Hello, darling.”
He was met with the typical starry-eyed wonderment, the blushing and quickening of heartbeat that all betrayed her delight at being so approached by trend #1— if Minho played into that, he was no sorer for it. Neither was he spoiled for choices, which posed his reasoning for offering to escort her to her dormitory, whereupon the worst simply had to happen.
On the stone steps of the grand, old building waited his target, her beauty seeming more so dazzling since he had been denied the sight of her. On seeing him, however, she rolled her eyes and muttered a curse, storming towards her friend.
“What the hell are you doing?” she hissed at Gina.
“Lovely to see you too,” Minho smarmed.
Gina startled, seemingly offended. “What is with that tone? I know you two aren’t on the best of terms—”
“The best of terms? He drugged me, Gina.”
“Right, so you keep saying, but like...” She glanced at Minho fondly, then shrugged. “He hasn’t drugged me.”
Dumbfounded, she stared at her friend, then at Minho. What pain he saw there perplexed him— it shouldn’t have felt like a betrayal, for there was nothing so intimate between them to betray.
“Minho was actually just offering to take me out for drinks tonight,” Gina said. “You can come if you want.”
“No way.”
“Alright, well, I’m not going to stand here trying to convince you. We’ll be at Cherub’s if you change your mind.” With that, Gina whirled on the spot and started off. Minho lingered.
“Aren’t you going with her?” she snapped.
“You should come.”
“And third wheel your date? No thanks.”
“There’s enough of me to go around,” Minho grinned, more amused than serious.
“What a gentleman you are.”
“I like to think so.”
“Do you like to think you’re the kind of gentleman that drugs the dames before he has his way with them, too?”
Minho flinched. “That’s not how it was. I just wanted to—”
“Loosen me up. Because I'm such an uptight bitch. Yeah, I get it.”
“No. Because you confound me. That’s all.”
She almost laughed, clutching her books so tightly the skin of her knuckles drew thin and tense.
“Do you have any idea how ridiculous that sounds? It makes no sense—”
“Come for a drink with me. I’ll make it make sense.”
She huffed a deep breath. “I can’t. I have plans.”
Minho quirked a brow. “With Heathcliff? How exciting.”
“It— It’s infinitely more exciting than spending a second longer with you, actually” she stammered.
Minho laughed. “That’s simply not true, darling.”
“How many times; I’m not your darling.”
“But you want to be.”
“Oh my god.” She spun on her toe, marching back up the steps. “I’m going inside.”
“I’ll see you at Cherub’s, then,” he called.
“Leave me alone, Minho!”
“Never,” he whispered as she shoved into the building.
And suddenly, things looked up.
--
Not your finest moment, to tiptoe into a bustling Cherub’s with your proverbial tail between your legs, dignity waving you off at the door.
He said he’d make it make sense: that’s what you clung to the entire way here, for there was so much about him—the things he did and said—that didn’t add up. You imagined what it might be like to understand him instead of loathe him as you peered between gatherings of students in search of him and Gina. About as typical a student union bar as one might imagine, Cherub’s was home to beer-soaked carpets and sticky seats, outdated seventies décor and mismatched lighting. Cheap and (not so) cheerful, it did just the trick for instilling a quick buzz, yet its nearness to accommodation meant that said buzz devolved to debauchery more often than not.
Heathcliff was, you rather thought, far more exciting.
You had vowed after the Fresher’s ball never to drink unless circumstances were dire enough to call for it, and so your detouring to the bar should have said something as to the state of your nerves, whereupon you ordered a vodka and tonic. With a weak smile at the tender, you gratefully took the almost-cool glass, a sip of the fizzy concoction neither unpleasant nor particularly enjoyable. It would take the edge off, in a moment.
“Drinking alone?”
The voice behind your ear startled, the glass slipping from your grasp only to be caught deftly by another, not so much as a drop spilled. Minho smiled warmly, ever radiant against the surroundings. Almost unsettlingly so, for all near eyes were trained to him, and in turn, you.
He brought the rescued glass to his glossed lips, a perfunctory sip followed by a sharp grimace. He set it on the bar and slid it away, out of reach.
“Excuse me, I paid good money for that—”
“My condolences,” he sighed, raking slim fingers through silky, dark strands that framed shadowed eyes of liquid silver.
He flagged down the tender with a wave. “One pornstar martini and a Glenfiddich, straight. No ice. Make the martini virgin.”
“A virgin pornstar martini?”
“I am a collection of paradoxes, darling.”
Your heart pounded; hopeless as it was.
The drinks arrived promptly, and Minho took them in hand.
“Where’s Gina?” you asked, realisation of her absence coming perhaps a touch too late.
Minho smiled. “Come on.”
He led you through the student bodies and to the rear of the venue, where a booth table went unoccupied. A folded piece of A4 card with ‘RESERVED’ scrawled on it adorned the polished table; you poorly stifled a laugh.
“They reserved a table for you? At Cherub’s?”
Minho nodded, sliding into the opposite seat and setting the drinks down. “I asked them to, yes.”
“It’s a student bar, not a five-star restaurant. Honestly. Who are you?”
Minho settled, a serene smile on his lips. “I believe we’ve had this conversation.”
You rolled your eyes. “Right.” And took the cocktail glass. The pink concoction finished with a half pomegranate slice smelled sweet and fruity, yet distinctly lacked the tang you wished it had.
“This didn’t have to be non-alcoholic,” you weakly complained.
“Mhm. Well. I’ll not be guilty of the same thing twice,” he replied, swirling whiskey around his own short glass. “Besides; you don’t strike me as a drinker.”
“Do I strike you as the drug taker?”
Minho’s gaze fell. “No.”
You hummed and sipped your drink. In truth, giving him a hard time was beginning to lose its novelty. Not only did you wish to move on from the whole thing, but it was getting harder to withstand the clear guilt in his mesmerising eyes. Whatever his intentions had been, they most certainly were not malicious, which ought to count for something, you thought.
“I’m still sorry,” he said.
“I know.”
“I’d very much like to make it up to you.”
“How?”
Minho opened his mouth to speak, but in place of his alluring tone came a high-pitched screech of your name; you startled and looked to Gina, who was barrelling towards the table.
“You came!” she cried, shoving hastily into the seat beside Minho; he scooted aside as best he could, but was already trapped. She linked an arm through his, settled into his side, utterly at home. She looked you over incredulously.
“I didn’t think you’d show. You know; I actually can’t even remember the last time I saw you out,” she said, her thick, glossed lips sticky with reflective residue.
You forced a smile. Ignored how their apparent familiarity made your stomach twist. “Yeah. Me neither.”
“I’m always telling her she should get out more,” she continued, this to Minho. “It’s like she’s allergic to socialising.”
“I’m not allergic to it, G. I just prefer to—”
“Sit in and read, I know. Hey— I’m not saying it’s a bad thing. You do you, babe. I just find it funny that the only time you actually make the effort to come out is when you know a hot guy is going to be around.”
Your face flamed with heat— why did this martini have to be so horribly prudish? You stared into it, adequately mortified, for she wasn’t entirely wrong in her observations, and that only raised questions as to your character too difficult to answer in the light of day. Or grunge of bar, for that matter.
“You’ve got it all wrong, darling,” Minho intervened lightly. “I insisted on her coming so I could buy her a drink in apology for the... incident. The timing happened to be right for her. That’s all.”
Gina rolled her eyes. “Sure. Whatever.” She unlinked her arm from his, fanned out the ends of her short hair from the collar of her leather jacket. “I’m going to get a drink.”
She planted a brief kiss on Minho’s cheek, and slid gracefully out of the booth. Your heart catapulted to your throat, where it stayed until Minho spoke.
“We, uh—”
“I don’t want to know,” you quickly said.
“There’s nothing to know, darling. She’s just... exceptionally forward.”
“Don’t call me darling—”
“I call everyone darling.”
“I know,” you hissed. “Why do you think I feel so bloody stupid that it makes my heart race every time?!”
A moment of comprehension crossed you both, and where your realisation of emotional confession brought him to a slow smile, it brought you to cold despair.
You stood quickly, gathering yourself. “I shouldn’t have come; this was such a bad idea—”
A swift grip on your wrist stopped your panicked exit.
“Don’t leave.”
“Minho—”
“There’s so much I have to know about you,” he said, pinning you with a softening gaze. “So much that I don’t understand. So much that infuriates me, so much that intrigues. You’ve caused me so much trouble, but even so, there’s something that I... Something about you that makes me just—”
“Everything okay over here?”
Gina’s flat question javelined the moment; you looked to her, saw her unimpressed eye trained to where Minho held you still. She upturned her lips in a sneer, the three drinks in her hand trembling.
“You couldn’t just let me have this, could you?” she snarled at you.
“Gina—”
“Every single fucking time, it’s you. It’s always you. Every boy I've ever liked or that’s ever shown any interest in me— They always fall for you. It’s like you can’t stand to see me happy.”
Gutted with guilt and confusion, you snatched your wrist from Minho.
“It’s not what you think, at all. We were just—”
“You might be beautiful on the outside,” she spat. “But inside, you’re a fucking monster. Everyone will see that one day.”
Minho rose from his seat. “That’s enough,” he snapped, glowering. “She takes no blame in this. She takes no blame in anything you accuse her of. It’s her fate to—” And he stopped himself short, as though stumbling back from a precipice. He straightened himself and took a deep breath.
“It’s not her fault,” he said acerbically.
Gina pursed her lacquered lips. “Right. So, it’s yours then? That's what you’re saying?”
Minho shrugged. “Perhaps I manoeuvred in such a way as to ensure you got me close to her, yes.”
Your gut turned over with hot nausea.
“What does that even fucking mean?” Gina balked, anger wrinkling her. “Sometimes you talk like you’re from a different planet, I swear to God.”
Minho sniffed, then smiled. He licked his lips, and said plainly, “I used you to get to her, darling.”
Gina’s jaw slacked, then tightened. It seemed she understood, this time, and perhaps you saw the next thing coming from a mile away: she swore and brutally tossed the three drinks she held straight at Minho, soaking and swilling his head, face and chest with sticky, sweet alcohol. The man took it well, for all his surprise, and swept his hands down his face stoically.
“You two are made for each other,” she hissed, and with that, turned tail and stalked away.
All eyes in near vicinity watched in tense silence as you, unable to even think beyond the molten mortification of it all, did much the same. Perhaps Minho called after you, and perhaps a small part of you wished to stay and console him, yet the larger part of you seethed with disappointment, for he had once again demonstrated himself to be less than half the man you ever wished to be so attracted to.
Minho, for all his obvious and daunting appeals, was not a good man.
--
Minho was starting to believe that the Fates had something against him.
Every attempt he made to get close to her ended in unmitigated disaster, and as if that wasn’t headache enough, he was now forced to acknowledge that what burned in him when he thought of the mortal girl was not simple curiosity: he craved her.
This called into question everything he knew: his quest, his mother’s wishes, his own existence as the God of Love, for as has been established, the God of Love loves all. He does not fall in love. Until he does.
 Perhaps it would simply be easier to out the truth of it all. Yes, it would shatter her mortal logic and push her to the limits of her comprehension, but what was the alternative? To continue wresting his own desires until such a time as he imploded? There was only so much one could take, even for a God, and Minho felt the tether of his patience rapidly diminishing.
Whatever he decided to do, he could not do it under these circumstances. He would have to, once again, make amends. Somehow.
What small silver lining there was to this whole mess came in the form of her moving back to Goodhart House, presumed discomfort between she and Gina resulting in such separation. Minho knew well what part he’d played in that, but in truth, couldn’t bring himself to feel entirely bad about it.
Two nights later—he had learned that mortals valued their space—saw him timidly knocking on her bedroom door, an uncharacteristic bout of nerves swirling about him. Moments passed before she answered, her vacant expression drawing grim on the sight of him.
“What do you want?”
The afternoon sunlight streaming through the window appeared to halo her, a warmth resonating from her person and within her room that set upon Minho a steady yearning; he could take her in his arms so easily, make her feel things no mortal man could.
Instead, he licked his dry lips, and from behind his back, produced the object he’d been concealing. She glanced at it, brows knitting together.
“What the hell is that? A twig?”
“I couldn’t find an olive branch.”
Just like that, the subtlest of curves to her lips ignited hope. She quickly reset herself into a deep-set frown.
“You’re an idiot,” she said.
“I am.”
“Gina and I aren’t speaking because of you.”
“I know.”
“You used her.”
“I did.”
“I mean; why did you have to be so—” she huffed. “You could have been nicer about it.”
“She knew what was happening,” Minho shrugged. “Sugar coating it would have only wounded her further.”
“You can’t just use people, Minho.”
Minho quirked a brow. “But it worked, didn’t it?”
“What?”
“It worked. You’re talking to me again. You’ve done nothing but talk to me since the minute you saw me with her, in fact.”
She dropped her gaze, wrapped her arms around herself. “You let her believe you liked her.”
“I do like her,” Minho replied.
“Oh.”
“Just nowhere near as much as I like you.”
A small puff of breath from her sweet lips seemed almost to indicate disbelief, and Minho supposed that until now, he’d made no such clear indication of his feelings. Suggestion and vague inference, perhaps, while he tried himself to understand what he battled with, but such roundabout behaviour was not in his nature.
“I like you a lot,” he said softly.
She shook her head. “Stop.”
“You don’t believe me?”
“It’s not— I don’t know. I can’t do this.”
She moved to shut the door, but Minho caught it quickly, stepping inside.
“You won’t even give me a chance to explain?” he pressed.
“I can’t. You don’t get it. Gina likes you. She was so upset about the whole thing, and you’re just— You don’t care at all. If anything, you seem proud of it. I can’t be with someone like that.”
Minho crowded her, for while her mouth said one thing, her body said another. Against the near wall she shrank, the rampant thump of her heart so alluring as to draw him near until barely a foot of space rested between them.
“You’re lying to yourself,” he said. “You claim that you can’t be with someone like me, but you know it as well as I do, darling; there is no one like me. I am the epitome of what you’ve always craved, and pretending otherwise will only push you to madness.”
“Minho—”
“As for the girl,” he interrupted softly, still so near. “She was a means to an end, yes. And you are correct; I am proud that my course of action bore fruit. I would do the same thing again, given a choice.”
She shook her head. “That’s the problem. I told you already; you can’t just use people.”
“I can do whatever I damn well please, and so should you. You have that right.”
“Not if it hurts other people.”
“And what of hurting yourself? Why sacrifice your own happiness for someone that doesn’t value you? Calls you names? Thinks you no more than a heartless monster? You might consider her a friend, but I assure you darling, she holds no such fondness towards you. Who do you think it was began the slanderous rumours that circulated after your Fresher’s ball?”
Pain flashed in her watering eyes; a truth that perhaps she had always quietly known brought to the surface.
“This abstinence from me only serves to hurt you.”
She cast a contemptuous glare cast up at him. “You don’t know what you’re saying,” she snapped. “You don’t know the first thing about me or what I'm feeling.”
Minho pressed in close, strong arms either side of her head. He hummed softly, “I hear how your heart cries out to me. See how your womanhood swells the closer we are; I only wish you’d give it to me, darling. I’d take such good care of it.”
He felt a shiver barely suppressed as she relented, melting by the second. Words of honey in her ears warmed her from within; Minho might die if he couldn’t taste.
“I wish to undo you and put you back together, one delicious, wet molecule at a time,” he said gently, nosing her soft lobe, then along her jaw. Her breaths devolved to soft pants, each one redolent of sweet nectar that further maddened him. “I’d defy the heavens themselves if it meant I could spend a single night with you.”
--
Minho had once said that arts students were hopeless romantics: he seemed none removed from the vagaries of waxing poetic himself.
You would have given it more thought if not so tightly strung with desire for the man that had, by some cosmic or divine will, worked his way into your bedroom. You knew nothing about him— that much had not changed. Neither had it changed that you detested how he carried himself, how he seemed so aloof to the most basic of kindnesses, how confidence and self-assurance came so naturally to him while it constantly evaded you.
It made no sense that a man like him could desire a woman like you, yet here he was, in your space, hot and firm, whispering such sweet and magical words as to make your head spin and your heart throb.
“Your desire for me is so strong, I can taste it,” he said breathlessly; a statement of fact offered as such, and you weren’t of the mind to deny it.
“Will you admit it?” he pressed. “Return my sentiments?”
Your weak nod told it. “Yes.”
He drew his lip between his teeth, a quick glance cast down your frame. “Am I permitted to touch you?”
“Yes.”
He held a cautious hand over your heaving chest. “Here?”
You nodded; his hand swept to your tummy, still at a hover. “Here?”
“Y— Yes.”
He hummed, then held over the curve of your waist, no contact made and yet electricity flitted between the inches. “Here?”
“Anywhere,” you breathed, defeated, a wreck. “Touch me anywhere. Everywhere. Please.”
Minho grinned, the silver ripple of his eyes flashing smug victory. A hand under your chin tilted your head back to present wanting lips, and when he kissed you, all else faded from existence. Near painfully soft was the first explorative brush, the man inclined to feel out your acclaimed desire— when you curled a grip to his shirt, he indulged you deeply, locking plush lips with yours and taking what he—unbeknownst to you—had already decided was his to covet. Bursts of white-hot delight rendered you breathless and dizzy, and when he broke off, you thought only of more.
“Swear to me that you’ll be mine,” he said, voice a thick and husky rasp.
“Minho...”
“Swear it,” he pressed. “Or this goes no further.”
The quiet promise was made in all but an instant, “I swear,” but even tight in his arms it was akin to stepping from a cold and slippery cliff; you felt to be falling, rescinding all control and handing it to this man that you knew nothing of, but craved like water to a dying man.
With a groan of delight, Minho swept you from the wall and about to the bed, where he laid you down and followed your form. Having no such experience with intimacy save for what the pages of your novels told, your expectations were none. The wanton urges held dominion, your chastity looking on in resigned approval as he smothered your neck and throat with attention, lavished your body with his touch, stripped you of all that hindered his touching your skin. In the warm light of the late afternoon, you laid naked beneath him, bared and as vulnerable as ever a soul may be. Minho looked at you, his gentle eyes seeming more so infinite with the awakening of intimacy; soft, patient hands canvassed your skin— waist, hips and thighs. Gentle, moist lips worshipped you at fingers, toes and lips, such reverent attention that swelled your heart to near bursting.
“You’ve never laid with a man before?”
A giggle bubbled out before you could stop it. Minho cocked his head questioningly.
“S— Sorry,” you mumbled. “No. I haven’t. But…” You hesitated, wondered on the timing, then asked anyway. “Did you have to ask me like that?”
“Like what?”
“Like a nineteenth century suitor,” you laughed.
Minho grinned and shook his head, seemingly embarrassed. “Sorry,” he chuckled. “I forget sometimes.”
You ran your hands over his. “Forget what?”
For a long moment, he merely admired how your fingers slotted together. He opened his mouth as though to speak, but instead took a deep breath, and smiled once more. “Nothing.”
His kiss this time was insistent, but gentle. The exchange soon forgotten, work was made of stripping him, the act itself seeming dreamlike the more of him was revealed. Skin smooth and flawless, the complexion of which was so deep and rich a healthy glow, it made you shy to touch it. Clothing removed and tossed aside, the naked sight of him was entirely reminiscent of something— something you could not quite put your finger on, but that nagged at the back of your mind.
He returned to you, all silken warmth and firm in the right places. Between your open legs he settled, your inhibitions melting with his attention— kisses and careful touches, each one further devolving until he could no longer exact patience. He touched you where most you ached, assessing your every expression.
“Tell me if it’s too much,” he whispered, lips to lips, soft ministrations over your naked centre eliciting groan after whimper. Slow and controlled, he rubbed you, then parted you to run a finger through the wetness. He shuddered and drew tight, a firm kiss pressed to your mouth.
“So beautiful,” he mumbled, wet digits circling you once more. “You’ll make the perfect companion.”
Too far gone to give much consideration to the perplexment his words instilled, you could only cling to him and wave the ride of euphoria as it flooded you, one molten lash after another. Was it normal to be so immediately aroused by so minimal a touch? Normal to feel like body might split from soul after only minutes of such stimulation?
“Don’t fight it. I’ll guide you through it, darling.” He kissed your bared throat. “Mhm, just like that. Give yourself over to it—”
“Ngh, Min, please—”
“Yes, fuck.” He quickened his motions, a gentle but rapid flurry of sensation against your throbbing centre. Thighs parted wider still for yet more of what he gave, you writhed in desperation, panted like a possessed creature, gave in to what he beckoned out of you. With a cry of delight and no shred of a complex, you trembled violently through the orgasm, felt yourself coming undone on the man’s fingers. Minho hummed and kissed your cheeks, your chin, your forehead, ever patient until the violence had subsided and only your tender panting remained. He ran a soft, light finger through your dripping sex. 
“You’re ready for me,” he muttered, and closed the gap between your bodies.
Spent but still yearning, it seemed almost too natural to open to him and trap him between your thighs. Minho smiled as though with pride, angling himself just so that the formerly observed ‘third leg’ could be seen from your laying position— a most intimidating sight, but one that had you clenching around air. Minho took himself in hand, the girth such that even he struggled to maintain a whole grip. A slow drag from his base and over thick, smooth shaft to blushed tip, and he sucked in air through his teeth, let slip a gravelly groan.
“Can you take me, darling?” he asked softly. “All of me?”
Your weak nod in place of words seemed somehow to dissatisfy him, but all the same, he kissed you tenderly. Tracing the line of his body with trembling hands as he aligned himself, the breaching prod stretching you, you drew tight with a gasp. Minho hissed and the silver of his eyes swirled intensely, each inch that he sunk seeming to exacerbate it; pebbles to rock pools.
“S— Slowly,” you pleaded, the warm soreness of his entrance only just beginning to turn dull ache. “Please.”
“I have you, darling. Trust me.”
Fully sheathed and with his hips cradled tightly to your body, he began to move a slow pace. Such bizarre sensation to feel so thoroughly full, almost sated, on the brink of being driven mad.
“Okay?” he breathed, weight on his arms to better assess you.
You nodded. “Yes. K— Keep going.”
Drawing his lip between his teeth, he maintained the motions, the mattress beneath you creaking its rhythmic complaint. Transfixed to where your bodies connected, Minho’s attention diverted, you explored the curious shimmer to his skin as he moved— perhaps it was the fading sunlight, the evening rolling in with its tricks. It seemed as though tiny rivers of silver moved beneath his skin and through his veins, each one snaking beautifully up his arms, over his shoulders, down his chest to— His chest. How had you not noticed it until now? Amidst the otherworldly perfection there sat the smallest of blemishes, faded purple and gently rounded. Proof that he was indeed real, for over the latter minutes you might have begun to doubt it.
Heart pounding and rapidly approaching yet another crisis of heavenly delight, you brought your middle and index finger together, and by instinct, pressed them to the spot that was now not only familiar to you, but that joined the fragmented pieces of puzzle.
It was a perfect match.
Minho, seemingly oblivious, grunted your name, his rhythm now devolved to a frantic rut. He collapsed atop you, held your warmth close, the smooth drive of his thickness made blissfully easy by the second orgasm he gifted that in turn brought on his own— he shivered and clung to you, words of praise and nonsense both flitting from his bitten lips.
The afterglow was as intense and intimate as the act itself, for Minho gently attended to you, putting you together as he so expressed a wish to. He kept you near to his side, curled up, and whispered stories that you soon forgot in contented, restful slumber.
What you would not soon forget, however, was the truth newly discovered.
The angel had returned to you.
--
Minho now profoundly understood what it was the mortal poets clamoured so desperately to capture.
It was with alarming clarity that he realised he had undertaken his duties as the God of Love with no real concept of what love actually was or could be— such a spectacular thing could not be wrested into something simple; something bite-sized and digestible. All his life he had been casting his arrows and looking on warmly as mortals embraced and made love. He heard their romantic declarations and loving promises with the sort of fond understanding a parent might have for their babbling toddler, and gave it no more consideration than that.
How naïve and foolish he had been. How much he’d missed out on! He dreaded to even think of it now, and cursed his aloofness to the power of what he so easily commanded. Love, he had realised, was the whole point. Powerful enough to fell entire kingdoms, but gentle enough to soothe the most septic of wounds. Wondrous and warm yet cutting and cold, the faces of love were mortally unpredictable, and therein laid its allure.
Minho looked to the future; he had failed in his quest, that much was without question, and could not return to heaven if he wanted to. His mother’s wrath would be terrible, and he was aware enough of his own strengths to know that a conflict with Aphrodite would sign off on his demise, blood or not. And all of that was without the terrible considerations of what she might do to his beloved.
There was nothing for it. He had to do something, and there was no way around it being drastic.
No way around any of it, now that the God of Love was in love.
--
Had you been informed several weeks ago that you’d be engaged in an illicit affair with a man you started out detesting, you’d have cried insanity.
Still; that was the truth of things, and waking next to him after what constituted your first night with any man was not half as terrible as you might once have believed. You had marvelled, mostly. All over again. That he had wanted you at all was mystifying, but when he awoke to find you right where he’d left you, he had proved his want all over again.
A week continued just like this, with not so much discussion as heated, stolen moments. You pleaded that what you were doing be kept under wraps, for the attention he commanded was not something you sought. Begrudgingly, he had acquiesced, but made it known that one day he would show you off to all who came within distance.
This night, he reposed under the stream of pale moonlight that shone through your window; following exertions you had slept straight through the evening and to the small hours. The smooth curve of his lean back disappeared beneath your sheets, his muscled leg hung out and over the bed. Plush lips utterly relaxed and face framed by silky strands of raven black, it struck you once again just how—while unthinkably beautiful—very normal he looked like this. Only when he opened his eyes and mouth did it become clear that he existed on a plane above and beyond other simple people, and while unsure of the finer details, the quirky qualities he possessed had begun to vibrantly outshine those things about him that once irked. He was boastful, yes, and terribly proud. He spoke before he gave much (any) thought and had little regard for consequences, both for himself and those around him.
But he was the very spirit of adventure. Thrillingly spontaneous and occasionally reckless, he dragged you out from under your books and away from your comfort zone, making it so that he instead became a security blanket, for wherever he was, there was safety. The wild promises he made ranged from a lifetime of wealth and happiness with him to taking you around the world. Well intended, of course, but ultimately too fantastical to ever truly believe. Whatever this was and for however long it would last, it wasn’t so wrong to enjoy it.
Led by the hand of desire, you reached out to touch him. A gentle trace down the slope of his shoulder and over the curve of his smooth back, firm under your fingers. You thought of the first time you touched him, before you’d even spoken so much as a word to each other. How he seemed the most beautiful creature your dreams had ever chanced to conjure, for that was what you’d believed him to be— a being born of pure gold, floating on magnificent white wings.
But this man was no dream. He was something else entirely.
A soft murmur of breath, and Minho’s eyes cracked open slowly. Calm pools of silver looked upon you, stirring with love. He smiled softly.
“Who are you?” you whispered.
His smile faded, yet he did not move. He blinked sleepily, slowly.
“You know who I am,” he said quietly. “I told you.”
“The God of Love?”
He nodded, just barely.
“Sent here to curse me for being too beautiful?”
He nodded again.
“By your mother?”
“The Goddess Aphrodite.”
The room was silent. There was no urge to laugh. No stroke of cold disbelief. No terrible fear or suggestion of mockery or anything other than a wave of acceptance, bathed in cold, silver light.
A God.
He was a God.
“Why me?” you whispered.
Minho puffed a soft breath through his nose. Amused, perhaps, by your immediate acquiescence.
“I’m nobody,” you added.
He lifted his head from the pillow, propped himself up by elbow. “Do you truly believe that, or are you being modest?”
You blinked at him, the truth of it in your eyes. He sighed gently, took your hand across the bed.
“You are the most beautiful woman to ever have lived,” he said quietly, running his thumb over your knuckles. “Kind of heart and exquisite of soul, you outshine everything and everyone around you. You were born of a God—”
“What?”
“So I suspect, anyway. I intend to find out for certain. But I do not think your mother was entirely mad with her stories.”
You balked at him. “You’re saying she was telling the truth?”
“Perhaps. A version of it, as she remembers it. Mortal memories are ephemeral things. Regardless, your beauty is divine, and that cannot be disputed.”
“You’re exaggerating.”
“I’m not,” he chuckled. “Had you lived several thousands of years ago, it would have been you that all of Greece warred over and that the Trojans bled to defend. You are fated to be revered and worshipped for your beauty, more so than even that of my mother’s. This is why she sent me. To shoot you with my arrows and curse you to love something so foul it would disgrace you and push you into a solitary life.”
You swallowed over the disbelief— for all your readiness to hear him out, you found yourself stumped.
“You are invulnerable to my arrows. You see beyond the veil of my mortal disguise. You were able to touch me in my true form. Only divine blood could grant such boons.”
“How do you know I'm invulnerable?” you asked, and on his torn face saw the obvious truth of it. You mumbled a quiet, “Oh.”
“I’m sorry,” he whispered.
“Talk about a lucky escape.” You tried to laugh, though it was a bittersweet reveal. He was only doing as instructed, you supposed. Things were different then, too. He didn’t know you. Didn’t love you.
Keen to change the subject, you did just that.
“Your mother—”
“Aphrodite.”
“R— Right. Aphrodite.” You cleared your throat. “Why would she want to curse me like that? If what you’re saying is true, it’s hardly my fault.”
Minho shrugged. “The Olympians care little for semantics. I love my mother, but she is as susceptible to vanity as anyone. It wouldn’t be the first time that jealousy has driven her hand.”
“But—” You leaned into him. “This is the twenty first century. Things like that don’t happen anymore. I mean; revering and worshipping, or whatever.”
“Don’t they? What are celebrities and influencers if not modern-day Gods? Politicians if not modern-day kings? Wealth and fame might no longer be measured in cattle and heroic deeds, but it is as attainable today as ever it was, and the power it bestows can be terrible. Armies rallied at the tap of a button. Lives ended at the publishing of a post. Times are different, yes, but fundamentally, mortals will never change.”
An element of truth to his words, you shrunk back against the pillows, head spinning. To suppose that it was all real was one thing— to suppose that it was all happening to you, was another.
Minho kissed your hand softly. “Don’t fret, darling. You are perfectly safe with me.”
“How can that be true? You just told me that Aphrodite has it in for me. That Aphrodite is real. That all the Gods are real.”
Minho hummed. “It’s a lot to absorb, I know. But it is fact. As the world changed and mortals developed beyond what even we predicted, we were lost to them. They turned from us. Nobody prays to us anymore. There are no sacrifices or festivals. Our names are told in stories and that is our legacy. We—our flesh and blood and everything that makes us—are myths.”
He whispered the last word, a sadness in his eyes that tugged insistently at your heart. You leaned back to him, pressed a soft kiss to his cheek.
“You feel real enough to me,” you mumbled.
Minho smiled slightly. “I am glad of that.” And turned into you, a palm on your cheek bringing you back for a firmer kiss. With a soft gasp that turned moan on the sensation of his slick tongue slipping into your mouth, you fell willingly into the hazed content that the God of Love seemed so exclusively able to invoke. Dragged across the bed until tucked underneath him, he shadowed you from the moonlight, raven locks tickling your cheeks. Keen hands slipped down your body to tenderly part your legs, the suggestion of his arousal prodding thigh until he, quite familiarly and with a chaste kiss to your throat, sunk inside you. Clinging to his broad shoulders and moving with the man, for you had come to know the paces he enjoyed, Minho filled you gently and slipped away with each controlled thrust. Silver eyes told a maelstrom of truths and sadnesses that his long years of life had portended, and by the gradual incline of coming undone at his ministrations, you saw them all. He watched your descent into euphoria, and you saw them all— the lovers, the souls, the stories, the worlds that had been touched by Eros’s arrows, generations of lives built on their enchanted tips, civilisations birthed and ended by the snap of his bow string. An existence spent between heaven and Earth of unspeakable loneliness propelled by gratification of servitude brought you to hot tears amidst the release of crisis.
And you saw that he would have been alone in perpetuity, were it not for you.
--
Minho had a plan.
The beginnings of a plan, anyway, which he thought ought to count for something.
He could not call on any of his aunts or uncles for aid without alerting Aphrodite to the state of things, and so he turned his thoughts to what he could do. The things he possessed. After only moments of consideration, he broke into absurd and near hysterical laughter. How foolish he had been, once again! How could he forget?! Of all the things to slip his mind and fall into obscurity!
He had a palace.
Eros’s famed sky palace of jewels and gold— that was what he possessed. That was where he could go, for it was too removed from heaven for Aphrodite or any of the other Gods to be bothered making the journey. They would be left alone there. It was perfect.
The idea had come to him at high noon— a most inconvenient time for ideas to spring upon one. Unable to bear a second’s delay, he burst out of Goodhart and sprinted across campus, drawing heads and attention from all he passed. When he reached the lecture hall, he swept from room to room, offering breathless apologies to the bewildered occupants for his intrusion on finding her in none of them, much to his irritation. It stood to reason that the last he checked should be the place he found her: she looked up from her notebook, mortification freezing her from neck to forehead.
“Excuse me.” Minho flashed a dazzling smile at the Professor, who for all his usual nettlesome temperament, stood flabbergasted.
He strode confidently across the hall and through the projector’s beam, his shadow casting over the bullet point analysis of Austen’s pathetic fallacy. All eyes followed as he approached her and made quick work of closing her notebook, plucking her pen from her hand and grabbing her backpack.
“I’ll just be taking this one,” he said to the Professor, taking her wrist with a gentle tug.
“What the hell are you doing?” she hissed, the eyes of her peers scalding her back.
Wordlessly, he stole her from the lecture hall, and said not a thing until they were out of the building and on the sun-warmed lawn, where he yanked her into a strong embrace.
“M— Minho!”
“I have it worked out, darling,” he said excitedly. “I have it all worked out!” He relinquished her to arm’s length, her flustered state inspiring urges that he swallowed down. “I know where we can go.”
“Go?” she repeated, confused. “Why would we go anywhere?”
“We can’t stay here. We spoke of this last night. My mother is—”
“You said you’d protect me from her. You didn’t say anything about needing to go anywhere.”
“I thought that was implied, darling. I assumed you understood.”
“Understood what?”
“That yes, I will do my utmost to keep you safe, but not even my power can match that of Aphrodite. If she discovers my betrayal, she’ll stop at nothing to hunt us down.”
The fluster of her condition gave way to dreaded realisation; Minho saw it in her eyes, the panic.
“There is one place we will be entirely safe,” he quickly said. “Somewhere she nor any of the other Olympians can set foot.”
“Where?”
“My palace.”
“P— Palace?”
Minho nodded in earnest. “Yes, darling. It is protected, its gates open only to me. We will want for nothing there. We can be together, undisturbed.”
She looked around, as though lost. “But I...” Her voice was weak. “I can’t just leave everything. This is my life.”
“I am your life now, darling. There’s nothing here for you.”
“Nothing here for me?” Her features drew tense and she stepped away from him, shrugging off his touch. “You're saying all this is pointless? Everything I've tried to achieve is worthless?”
“N— No, I simply mean that—”
“I know what you mean. I have no-one to miss me if I should disappear.” Her bottom lip trembled, she wrapped her arms around herself. “And what if I stayed? Would all those worshippers you promised me show up? Would I have something then?”
Minho’s heart ached impossibly; how careless he had once again been. One would think him used to the fragility of mortal hearts by now.
“It’s too late,” he said sorrowfully. “My love for you is a betrayal to my mother. If you stay, she will subject you to terrible punishment before anything ordained for you ever happens. If you come with me...” He reached out to her tenderly, a hand on her trembling shoulder. “If you come with me, I can spare you that fate. You do not have to engage with me or love me in return, but I hope that you will at least allow me to make reparations for taking you away from all you know. I can give you a most beautiful life. I can show you such things as your books will never describe. I can dedicate myself to you, soul and all, and be whatever you wish me to be.”
Tears streaked her cheeks, each one a dagger to Minho’s composure.
“You will never be alone again,” he whispered. “This, I swear to you.”
--
Why were you even thinking about it?
The earth-shatteringly handsome God of Love—Eros himself—loved you. He wished to take you away to his sky-dwelling palace, where he would serve you until your mortal days gave out. He wished to dedicate himself to you. How many women could claim to be on the receiving end of such implacable devotion? How many women turned away from it, especially when the love was reciprocated?
Thus you asked yourself the question again— why were you even thinking about it?
The conflict that raged within you was that of head and heart. On the side of romance and such emotion as brought you to tears, your heart cried out. ‘Go with him,’ it pleaded. ‘See all that he’s promised you. Take a chance on the extraordinary. Be the main character, just this once. You can never go back to life without him now— how it hurts to even imagine it. Only immovable darkness is left in place of such radiant light, and his light is what you must stay in forever. You love him, foolish girl. Go with him!’
On the side of reason and familiar doubt that was in some ways easier to hear, your head told other truths. ‘Run from him,” it commanded. ‘It is madness to believe any of this. What you saw that night was a hallucination; you were overtired. Overworked. He lies to you. Recall what he did to you. He plays on your vulnerability and would have you tripping over yourself for some impossible fairytale that cannot be real. It cannot be real. Screw your head back on, foolish girl. Run from him!’
With a night spent alone you hoped to come upon some form of clarity, but instead spent the long and empty hours tossing and turning, floating between despair and joy. You were at a crossroads, and the next decision you made would forever change the course of your life.
Go, or stay.
Live, or suffer.
Love, or mourn.
--
By the guiding, formless hand of the West wind, Zephyrus, Minho always found his way to his sky palace.
It would be a fruitless task to try to explain, in mortal terms, just where the palace was located. Not even Minho could, had he tried. That was why he needed gentle Zephyrus. Rather, it existed on a plane between those of heaven and Earth, in a pellucid sky of cloudless wonder that cycled through dreamy days and starry, moon-filled nights. The palace seemed always as though to be drifting along, warmed by streams of hot, shimmering air that kept it afloat. Its jewel-encrusted and gold-plated high walls caught the brilliant peaches and pinks of sweet Eos, Goddess of the Dawn. A reflective moat of the clearest still water kept the palace enclosed, magnificent fish and regal sea creatures having made their homes there. Great birds with feathers of virgin white and onyx black soared the length of the battlements and swooped through the palace arches, attracted by the glittering structure. It mattered not how many times Minho visited. It always took his breath away.
He looked at the girl bundled in his arms, her eyes still tightly closed, her head still buried in his chest. His white wings enclosed her safely, kept her from Zephyrus’s inherent chill.
“Won’t you look, darling?” he asked softly.
“No.”
He stifled a chuckle; how endearing she was.
“This would be one of those wonderful things I told you about.”
She cracked open one eye, just barely.
“You’re perfectly safe,” he assured her.
With a swallow and a timid nod, she turned her head out to the view, and Minho saw immediately how her eyes welled up with tears as they caught the rising light. He dared to imagine Eos might be making a special show of things, just for them, for the sky was ablaze with a rich and vibrant beauty the likes of which he’d never seen. Oranges and deep pinks melted into variegated crimson, the horizon seeming as though to glow. The palace was iridescent with life, it walls and towers reflecting and refracting the dawn in such a resplendent spectacle of colour, Minho was sure she would never forget this moment.
She maintained silent awe until Zephyrus had safely escorted them to the palace steps: the West wind twirled and whirled around them, hugging her warmly before departing, much to her delight. She kept close to Minho as the joy wore off, her fear of the near edge demanding it, yet it was her resolve that warned her from holding his hand, from taking comfort.
Such were her terms.
Such was Minho’s pain.
--
Take a chance on the extraordinary, your heart had said.
So it was that ‘extraordinary’ fell catastrophically short of describing what it was you now looked at: an opulent crystal palace at home in the sky, a testament to all things fantastical and impossible. The majesty of it was almost enough to take away from the inherent unease of being so high up; if this was even high, for it hadn’t escaped your notice during the journey that you hadn’t so much travelled up as through. Through what, you were surely unqualified to say, but what was certain was that this place was so removed from what you knew to be true of physics and gravity—indeed any temporal rule—it was pointless to think on it too much.
Minho had indeed promised to show you incredible things, oblivious that he himself was one of them. His feathery wings closed on his back, his raven hair fluttered in the warm breeze. He led you up the crystal steps to a vast arched gateway manned by—you rubbed your eyes—floating spears?
“Don’t be alarmed,” he said intuitively. “They will do you no harm. They’re here to protect us.”
As you passed by them, adequately mystified, the spears hopped and jerked as though in salute, their steel tips polished to a fine, sharp edge. Over the glass drawbridge he took you, a river of water so clear running beneath, you could see every pore of your own reflection in it. Creatures swum in the calm currents, fish and eels and octopi, their scales and skin of such stunning purple and deep green, it amazed you to look at. As you approached the tall and gilded palace doors, they opened before you, a swarm of floating brooms and mops and hat stands and trolleys and all other manner of furniture descending upon you with swift elegance.
On your fright, Minho held a hand up. Everything stopped, and sprung to attention in a neat, formal line.
“Darling.” He turned to you. “These are our attendants.”
You blinked at him; your head was beginning to hurt.
“They are invisible to our eyes,” he added softly. “It was my wish that we be left to our own devices. Entirely undisturbed. Just the two of us.”
“So there are... people? Holding those?”
Minho nodded. “Of a fashion, yes.”
You looked around him to the patient line, where mops fluttered and trolley wheels spun in anticipation. You weren’t sure you wanted to know what ‘of a fashion’ even meant.
“I would have had us here alone, but the palace takes some looking after,” he said. “Not to mention your own needs to be attended to.”
“I can look after myself. I don’t need—”
“Please.” He moved as though to take your hand, but stopped himself short. The strength with which such a small thing smarted seemed ludicrous, yet you held no grounds for complaint. He was only doing as instructed.
“I would like to make sure the very best care is on hand for you. Allow me that,” he said quietly.
At your small nod, he turned away, wings unfurling gently as he entered his palace. The peach light that so radiantly streaked the sky haloed him and made him a breathtaking vision. Was a God truly so different from an angel?
The palace interior was as extravagant as the exterior, its vast halls encrusted with sapphires and aquamarine, pearls and diamonds, emeralds and topaz all trimmed with gold. Wall sconces of blue flame bathed all in a glorious light, the high ceilings finished with intricate murals so lovingly painted, it made your heart ache to simply look upon the heavenly scenes they depicted with Eros at their centre.
Escorted dutifully by the same two floating spears that had seen you inside, Minho guided you through the winding halls. He held them at the door he had led you to with no more than a look.
“These are your private chambers,” he said once inside. They were homelier than what you’d thus far seen, finished with soft furnishings, blankets and comforts and a more natural tone of light offered by long windows and an open fire. It was the fire that you were in the midst of admiring, when a dainty teacup flew up and in front of your face, bringing you to a shriek.
“Your attendants will keep you here,” Minho laughed. “Forgive them. They’re excited.”
The teacup rattled on its saucer, as though in agreement.
“It has been some time since anyone’s resided here,” he added.
Residing here. You were to live here. In this place between places, with a thousands-year old God. It seemed that only now this fact began to dawn on you, for a chill realisation swept over and extinguished the bewilderment that hitherto kept you together.
Minho watched you carefully, distance maintained as he stood at the door. You looked through the grand window, out over the endless sea of multicoloured sky.
“You promised me an answer,” he eventually said.
Your heart sank.
“I know.”
“Will you give it?”
You chewed your inner cheek, tracing the lines of wispy cloud that floated by.
“I have shown you the palace,” Minho said. “I have respected your boundaries of affection, despite how it pains me to act as though we are no more than friends. I have revealed my true form to you. I have done everything you’ve asked.”
“I know.”
“And so? Is your mind decided?”
Exasperated, you turned to him. The God of Love with so sorrowful a look of distress on his handsome face, it made you want to weep.
“My mind has been decided all along,” you said simply. “How could I ever say no to you?”
His silvery eyes lit up. “You mean...?”
“Yes,” you laughed. “I’ll stay.”
Without a second thought, the God of Love on his great, white wings surged across the space and caught you in his strong arms. He braced you against the pristine glass in an embrace of ignited passion, the gasp you emitted was devoured by his hungry mouth.
“How you infuriate me,” he mumbled between kisses, the slick of his tongue wetting your lips. “You have no idea the depth of the madness you would drive me to.”
“I needed time,” you breathed. “To get my head straight, to process it all.”
“I know, darling. I would have given you all the time that time itself possessed if I could.”
You kissed him gently. “Liar.”
He grinned, and with a low chuckle enclosed you in his magnificent wings, the feathers reaching around and curling under you to lift you from the ground. Poised on them as the most comfortable of elegant chairs, the God so close in your space and stood between your open thighs, it became soon apparent the type of mood that descended on him. An inferno of want tainted the silver of his eyes, his deep, gold complexion shimmering with the lust that made Eros so feral as to tear your shirt open and relieve you of your jeans, all that he might touch your skin— finally. Secured in the space of his heat, helpless but to succumb, the dainty cloth that hovered about his hips was torn away to reveal the intimidating girth of what he offered, sprung proud and hard. Lightheaded and too aroused to think much of consequence—you weren’t strictly here alone, after all—you clung to the slope of his shoulders as he aligned himself and with a sharp intake of breath, steadily sunk inside you. Groaning through the sensation of fullness, your delight was caught by his mouth on yours.
“You were made for me, my love,” he whispered. “It is you and I, until the end of time.”
“Minho—”
“Hush, dearest girl. Let me pleasure you the way your tender heart so deserves. Let me serve you as I crave to. Nothing makes me feel so alive as when you allow me inside you like this, sweet thing. Feel me, darling. Feel all of me.”
Sealed with a kiss, the God of Love thrust himself upon you, the slick drive made so much easier by your own steeped arousal. Yet it was not simply lust that brought you to gasps and the stinging tell of tears— to accept such pure and unconditional love, to accept that it was offered so readily, to accept that a creature so objectively perfect as him could be possessed of affection for you— sky palaces and jewels and divine landscapes could not compare to that impossibility.
So it is, the start of your new life.
So it was, in years to come, that the Goddess Aphrodite forgave her errant son and welcomed the mortal girl, gifting to her immortality on her wedding day.
So it ever shall be, that the tamed Eros and his beloved spend their sun-warmed, endless days reigning over love’s intricacies, granting to mortals the divine bliss they themselves found in one another.
One precious heart at a time.
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thus marks my last offering for the skz tropes collab! i really hope you enjoyed. this was by far my favourite of the bunch. if you could be kind enough to comment or even buy me a coffee as thanks for the 20k read, i would be super grateful. mica x
𝙥𝙡𝙚𝙖𝙨𝙚 𝙡𝙞𝙠𝙚, 𝙧𝙚𝙗𝙡𝙤𝙜, 𝙡𝙚𝙖𝙫𝙚 𝙮𝙤𝙪𝙧 𝙩𝙝𝙤𝙪𝙜𝙝𝙩𝙨 𝙛𝙤𝙧 𝙢𝙚 >
𝙝𝙖𝙫𝙚 𝙖 𝙣𝙞𝙘𝙚 𝙧𝙚𝙖𝙙? 𝙨𝙖𝙮 𝙩𝙝𝙖𝙣𝙠𝙨 𝙬𝙞𝙩𝙝 𝙖 𝙘𝙤𝙛𝙛𝙚𝙚 ♡ >
𝙘𝙝𝙚𝙘𝙠 𝙤𝙪𝙩 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙧𝙚𝙨𝙩 𝙤𝙛 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙨𝙠𝙯 𝙧𝙤𝙢𝙖𝙣𝙘𝙚 𝙩𝙧𝙤𝙥𝙚𝙨 𝙝𝙚𝙧𝙚 ♡ >
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mgg-81 · 7 days
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Everyone! Please check out this amazing author!💐💖💐💖💐💖💐💖
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𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦 𝘪𝘴 𝘢 𝘧𝘶𝘭𝘭 𝘭𝘪𝘴𝘵 𝘰𝘧 𝘰𝘶𝘳 𝘸𝘰𝘯𝘥𝘦𝘳𝘧𝘶𝘭 𝘴𝘦𝘭𝘦𝘤𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘦𝘢𝘴, 𝘱𝘢𝘴𝘵𝘳𝘪𝘦𝘴, 𝘴𝘸𝘦𝘦𝘵𝘴, 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘮𝘶𝘤𝘩 𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘦. 𝘸𝘦 𝘩𝘢𝘷𝘦 𝘮𝘢𝘯𝘺 𝘥𝘪𝘧𝘧𝘦𝘳𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘷𝘢𝘳𝘪𝘦𝘵𝘪𝘦𝘴 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘤𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘳 𝘵𝘰 𝘸𝘩𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘳 𝘤𝘳𝘢𝘷𝘪𝘯𝘨𝘴 𝘺𝘰𝘶 𝘮𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘩𝘢𝘷𝘦! 
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𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐲 𝐤𝐢𝐝𝐬
10:38 pm - 𝘣𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯; 𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘳𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘬𝘪𝘯𝘨 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
8:30 pm - 𝘣𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯; 𝘴𝘩𝘰𝘸𝘦𝘳 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 + 𝘳𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘦𝘧 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
8:14 pm - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘮𝘪𝘯𝘩𝘰; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳’𝘴 𝘱𝘭𝘢𝘤𝘦 + 𝘤𝘰𝘯𝘧𝘦𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘰𝘯 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
11:25 pm - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘮𝘪𝘯𝘩𝘰; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘣𝘦𝘥𝘳𝘰𝘰𝘮 + 𝘮𝘪𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘦𝘢𝘤𝘩 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘵𝘸: 𝘮𝘦𝘯𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯𝘴 𝘰𝘧 𝘥𝘦𝘱𝘳𝘦𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘰𝘯)
6:24 pm - 𝘴𝘦𝘰 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘣𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘢𝘵 𝘢 𝘱𝘢𝘳𝘵𝘺 + 𝘯𝘰 𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘴𝘰𝘯 𝘢𝘵 𝘢𝘭𝘭 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
10:47 pm - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘧𝘰𝘳 𝘢 𝘣𝘦𝘵 + 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘧𝘦𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘯𝘨𝘴 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦) | pt.2
11:45 pm - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘷𝘦𝘩𝘪𝘤𝘭𝘦 + 𝘮𝘪𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘦𝘢𝘤𝘩 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
3:30 pm - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘷𝘦𝘩𝘪𝘤𝘭𝘦 + 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘧𝘦𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘯𝘨𝘴 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵)
4:15 pm - 𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘸𝘢𝘵𝘦𝘳 + 𝘢 𝘣𝘦𝘵 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
9:40 pm - 𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘷𝘦𝘩𝘪𝘤𝘭𝘦 + 𝘤𝘦𝘭𝘦𝘣𝘳𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
11:16 pm - 𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘢 𝘤𝘩𝘳𝘪𝘴𝘵𝘮𝘢𝘴 𝘸𝘪𝘵𝘩𝘰𝘶𝘵 𝘺𝘰𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵)
10:50 pm - 𝘬𝘪𝘮 𝘴𝘦𝘶𝘯𝘨𝘮𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳’𝘴 𝘱𝘭𝘢𝘤𝘦 + 𝘰𝘶𝘵 𝘰𝘧 𝘭𝘰𝘷𝘦 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘴𝘭𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
6:10 pm - 𝘺𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘫𝘦𝘰𝘯𝘨𝘪𝘯; 𝘬𝘪𝘴𝘴 𝘪𝘯 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘬𝘪𝘵𝘤𝘩𝘦𝘯 + 𝘮𝘪𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘦𝘢𝘤𝘩 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
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𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐲 𝐤𝐢𝐝𝐬
wounded hearts - 𝘣𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯; 𝘳𝘰𝘺𝘢𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘤𝘰𝘮𝘧𝘰𝘳𝘵)
love me, love me not - 𝘣𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘤𝘩𝘢𝘯; 𝘤𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘨𝘦 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘩𝘶𝘮𝘰𝘳, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
i’ll be here, always and forever - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘮𝘪𝘯𝘩𝘰; 𝘴𝘪𝘤𝘬 𝘧𝘪𝘤 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘤𝘰𝘮𝘧𝘰𝘳𝘵)
nobody compares to you - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘥𝘢𝘯𝘤𝘦𝘳 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵)
pretty cute - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘩𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘴𝘤𝘩𝘰𝘰𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
true love’s irony - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘳𝘰𝘺𝘢𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
thoughts (that i don’t want to hear) - 𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘮𝘢𝘧𝘪𝘢 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
of secret rendezvous and fishnet tights - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘧𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘹; 𝘪𝘥𝘰𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
picture perfect - 𝘬𝘪𝘮 𝘴𝘦𝘶𝘯𝘨𝘮𝘪𝘯; 𝘸𝘦𝘥𝘥𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
urgent romance intervention - 𝘬𝘪𝘮 𝘴𝘦𝘶𝘯𝘨𝘮𝘪𝘯, 𝘤𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘨𝘦 𝘢𝘶 (𝘴𝘭𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘩𝘶𝘮𝘰𝘳)
nct
nightmare - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘵𝘢𝘦𝘺𝘰𝘯𝘨; 𝘳𝘰𝘺𝘢𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘤𝘰𝘮𝘧𝘰𝘳𝘵)
stop poking me - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘵𝘢𝘦𝘺𝘰𝘯𝘨; 𝘤𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘦𝘨𝘦 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
the games we play - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘵𝘢𝘦𝘺𝘰𝘯𝘨; 𝘩𝘶𝘯𝘨𝘦𝘳 𝘨𝘢𝘮𝘦𝘴 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵)
a fake night - 𝘮𝘢𝘳𝘬 𝘭𝘦𝘦; 𝘧𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘥𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
the tutor - 𝘫𝘶𝘯𝘨 𝘫𝘢𝘦𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯; 𝘩𝘰𝘨𝘸𝘢𝘳𝘵𝘴 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵)
a bet - 𝘯𝘢 𝘫𝘢𝘦𝘮𝘪𝘯; 𝘧𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘥𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
safe haven - 𝘩𝘶𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘳𝘦𝘯𝘫𝘶𝘯; 𝘥𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘯𝘲𝘶𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘩𝘶𝘳𝘵 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘤𝘰𝘮𝘧𝘰𝘳𝘵)
best thing - 𝘱𝘢𝘳𝘬 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘵𝘳𝘢𝘪𝘯𝘦𝘦 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
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𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐲 𝐤𝐢𝐝𝐬
𝘢 𝘮𝘢𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘢𝘨𝘦 𝘴𝘵𝘰𝘳𝘺 - 𝘭𝘦𝘦 𝘮𝘪𝘯𝘩𝘰; 𝘧𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘮𝘢𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘢𝘨𝘦 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦) pt. 1 | pt. 2
𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘯 𝘰𝘶𝘵 𝘫𝘢𝘤𝘬𝘦𝘵𝘴 - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘩𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘴𝘤𝘩𝘰𝘰𝘭/𝘥𝘦𝘭𝘪𝘯𝘲𝘶𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘵𝘸: 𝘴𝘭𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘷𝘪𝘰𝘭𝘦𝘯𝘤𝘦) pt. 1 | pt. 2
a throne of roses - 𝘩𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘯𝘫𝘪𝘯; 𝘳𝘰𝘺𝘢𝘭 𝘢𝘶 (𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧, 𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘴𝘶𝘨𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦)
the red notebook - 𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘫𝘪𝘴𝘶𝘯𝘨; 𝘱𝘳𝘦-𝘥𝘦𝘣𝘶𝘵 𝘢𝘶 (𝘢𝘯𝘨𝘴𝘵, 𝘧𝘭𝘶𝘧𝘧)
795 notes · View notes
mgg-81 · 7 days
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😹😹😹❤️
3K notes · View notes
mgg-81 · 8 days
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At around 1 am, you arrived to Chan’s studio. He’d been working constantly, putting himself on the back burner again for work. He said he would be home earlier tonight but you knew it was not going to happen. You told yourself if he didn’t come home by midnight you would call him. If he hadn’t answered but 12:45 you were going to get him. Now here you are finally arriving home hand in hand close to 2.
He was silent the whole way home. Really since you showed up, save for the string of frantic apologies once the shock of your presence wore off. You simply said it was time to go home. Though graciously letting him finish the last thing he was doing, you were packing his other things in the background. The quiet stretched from that point on.
You stop him in the door way as he takes off his shoes.
“Hey” you say casually. “You know I love you right?”
“I love you too.” he looks scared and worried as it seemed to come out of nowhere.
“Well you don’t need to worry so much over it” you say running your thumb over the crease in his forehead to smooth out his worried creases.
His head tilts in confusion, “Hmm?” Did he say something aloud?
“You think I don’t know what’s going on in the big genius producer brain of yours? ‘You make her worry too much. Oh you fell asleep here again she’s probably mad’. That’s you in your head but in an Australian accent.”
He laughs and you smile.
“You need to take that worry and put it into worrying about yourself. I’m not going to leave just because you worked yourself to exhaustion. I’m going to bring you home and love you and take care of you until you can function properly again.”
“I don’t deserve you.”
“I think the same about not deserving you but I know I love you too much to let negative thoughts ruin what we have. I just try and be a little better everyday. For me and you.”
He kisses you with a smile, feeling such adoration for you blooming in his chest. He never thinks he can love you more than he already does, then you go and make him love you even more.
“Now c’mon I was gonna ask you to eat a little something but you seemed two seconds away from a deep sleep even in your studio so let’s just get in bed. We can watch something together until we fall asleep.”
He follows you hand in hand as you lead him to your bedroom, looking at you holding his hand so gently but securely that he hopes you never let go
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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connected
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bang chan x reader, 0.4k words, no warnings — fluff, comfort. taglist form.
a/n : made a little comfort fic for those who needed it :) i hope you enjoy 💌
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“Ah.” 
Chan smiles at the scene before him. It left him in a stupor when no one responded to him after he called your name several times upon arriving at the doorstep earlier, assuming you'd already slept. He swears he feels his heart melt after seeing you in a state like this, your head resting under your arm, with papers, pens, and highlighters scattered all over your desk. Your tablet is still on, playing faint music that seemed to disconnect from your headphones earlier. He feels his heart might burst right at this moment after seeing the title of the song playing on the lock screen of your tablet — connected.
“I think I might pass out right at this spot,” he says to himself. There's something lovely about your disheveled state. The bare, vulnerable side you show him every time you find yourself in a state like this – eyes all baggy and hair still messy from yesterday. He's convinced of the depth of your trust, seeing how willingly you reveal your vulnerable side to him – and all he desires is to shield you and tenderly care for you each time you reveal this part of yourself. He would stand in the shadows of your heart and tell you he’s not afraid of your dark.
He gently lifts you from your chair, carrying you to the shared bed. You almost stir awake, but he tries his best not to wake you up.
“Shh, love, it’s me. You’re okay. You fell asleep at the desk,” Chan gently calms you down – and you swear his voice resonates like a melody played by the angels themselves.
“What… what time is it?” you rub your eyes, your voice still coated with sleep.
“Time for you to sleep,” he smiles softly, leading both of you to the bedroom.
He then gently lays you on the soft mattress of the cozy bed, where the two of you share your most affectionate moments, reminding you of the constancy of his love. He tenderly covers you with the comforting sheets of the duvet, feeling your soul sink into the embrace of the bed. You swear you've never felt such serenity before, longing for this moment to last an eternity.
“I’ll clean your desk tomorrow, so don’t worry about anything.” Chan gently pulls you closer, running his fingers through your hair as he wraps his arms around your waist.
He gazes at your sleeping face, all peaceful and serene. A smile tugs at his lips as he slowly contemplates what he did to deserve someone like you in his arms, in his life, even. He presses a tender kiss to your forehead, fingers tracing your side. Soon after, he joins you in dreamland.
“Jalja, baby.”
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taglist : @agi-ppangx @bluethemoments @ashracha @wonootnoot @skzstarnet @straykidsland @k-labels
⋆ taetr4ck, est may 2023. / requests open
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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Yay, unsolicited advice time! Or, not really advice, more like miscellaneous tips and tricks, because if there's one thing eight years of martial arts has equipped me to write, it's fight scenes.
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Fun things to add to a fight scene (hand to hand edition)
It's not uncommon for two people to kick at the same time and smack their shins together, or for one person to block a kick with their shin. This is called a shin lock and it HURTS like a BITCH. You can be limping for the rest of the fight if you do it hard enough.
If your character is mean and short, they can block kicks with the tip of their elbow, which hurts the other guy a lot more and them a lot less
Headbutts are a quick way to give yourself a concussion
If a character has had many concussions, they will be easier to knock out. This is called glass jaw.
Bad places to get hit that aren't the groin: solar plexus, liver, back of the head, side of the thigh (a lot of leg kicks aim for this because if it connects, your opponent will be limping)
Give your character a fighting style. It helps establish their personality and physicality. Are they a grappler? Do they prefer kicks or fighting up close? How well trained are they?
Your scalp bleeds a lot and this can get in your eyes, blinding you
If you get hit in the nose, your eyes water
Adrenaline's a hell of a drug. Most of the time, you're not going to know how badly you've been hurt until after the fact
Even with good technique, it's really easy to break toes and fingers
Blocking hurts, dodging doesn't
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Just thought these might be useful! If you want a more comprehensive guide or a weapons edition, feel free to ask. If you want, write how your characters fight in the comments!
Have a bitchin day <3
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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ᯓ★ sing me to sleep
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ᝰ wc: 344
ᝰ author’s note: ive spent the last ten days on field research and it was hard for some people there, so i wanted to write something comforting for those who miss their close ones🫶🏽
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“hello?”
“channie? hi,” he heard your faint voice on the phone.
“everything alright?” he asked, unsure if he should be worried or not. it was pretty late, so you calling him in the middle of the night might’ve been alarming.
“yeah,” you let out quietly. “just can’t sleep.” chan hummed at your words, making himself comfortable in your shared bed. it was odd not having you around, not being able to hug you and kiss your forehead as you sleep.
“how’s the research doing? any progress?” he asked again, placing his phone right under his ear as he laid down.
“good, our professors said we’re doing great so far,” you responded quietly, rubbing your eyes. you were exhausted.
chan frowned at your tone. “you don’t sound too happy about it though. what’s going on, love?”
you stayed silent for a while. your field research was going great – your partner was a perfect match and your professors were really proud of both of you. but it wasn’t helping, not when you were so far from chan, not when you were exhausted and there was nobody to comfort you.
“i miss you,” you finally uttered, letting out a loud exhale. chan propped his head on his arm. “it’s hard without you here,” you added and a single tear fell down your cheek. you sniffed a little and it broke chan’s heart – he wished he was there with you. he wanted to cuddle you and play with your hair as you worked hard on your research material.
chan spoke softly when he heard you yawn. “do you want me to sing you to sleep, baby?” he asked and you hummed, wiping the tears from your cheeks.
“yes, please.” chan cleared his throat, making sure he was going to sound okay and he quietly started singing one of your favourite songs. you smiled faintly, hearing chan’s melodic voice as it lulled you to sleep. he made sure to stay on the phone with you long enough for you to be asleep, dreaming of you two being together again.
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ᝰ taglist: @astraystayyh @laylasbunbunny @l3visbby @like-a-diamondinthesky
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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He’s a musician
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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claire de lune | bang chan
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bang chan x friend gn!reader
summary: on a particularly rough night, y/n and chan find comfort in each other's company under the moonlight
word count: 1.1k
warning: discussions of grief, losing loved ones, mentions of death, angst and a bit of bittersweet but comforting (?) fluff
authors note: i don't actually think anyone will read this but i'm missing some ppl a little more than usual tonight. i thought i'd write this as a comfort for myself and for others who feel the same too
additional note: also, after years of using tumblr, i just figured out how to do this three pictures in a row thing and i am absolutely ecstatic about it
_ _ _
The knock on his studio door snapped Chan out of his trance.
He blinked his eyes a few times, his vision slowly coming back to focus, staring at the black computer screen in front of him. How long had he been zoned out? His head drifting to other places, clinging to lingering thoughts? 
He glanced at the clock. 1:45 AM. Had it really been that long?
The knock sounded and Chan cleared his throat, “Come in.”
The door opened slightly and y/n peaked through the small gap. 
“Oh, hey you,” Chan smiled tiredly. “It’s been a while.”
Y/n smiled. “Mind if I step in?”
“You know you’re always welcome,” Chan gestured to the couch behind him. The bags under y/n’s eyes didn’t go unnoticed by him. He couldn’t deny that he held his own too. Chan had been in the studio for so long he could barely remember what time he had entered and how much time had passed.
Y/n closed the door behind them, leaning against it. 
“Why are you up so late?” Chan asked.
“I could ask you the same.”
Chan chuckled. He glanced at the time again and sighed. He looked back at y/n, “Wanna go out on a walk?”
“Yeah, I could use some fresh air.”
_ _ _
Chan and y/n didn’t really have a destination in mind. They walked quietly side by side, matching each other’s pace. Occasionally, a soft sigh would break the silence or one of the two would point out the nice weather or a stray cat on the opposite side of the street. Both carried some kind of weight, a wearing shadow looming behind them.
Eventually the two found a park and made their way to a bench. Y/n let out a sigh as they sat. Chan followed, sitting a slight distance away from them. Neither made the first move to speak, both of their hearts aching to let go of the heavy anchor in their chest, but neither were courageous enough to say the words they needed to.
Chan looked up and sighed.
“Oh,” he whispered. “It’s a half moon tonight.”
Y/n followed his gaze up to the sky. They hummed in agreement. “Yeah, it’s beautiful.”
“You never did tell me why you were up,” Chan added.
A small pause. “Too much on my mind,” y/n mumbled.
“What were you thinking about?”
“It’s not so much of what I was thinking about,” y/n replied. “- but more of who i was thinking about,” they whispered. 
Y/n inhaled deeply and cleared their throat. “Why were you up?”
Chan chuckled, but his laughter held some heaviness. “I guess the same as you.”
After a longer silence, Chan spoke again. “Were they a friend, family... or a lover?”
“Family,” y/n spoke quietly, afraid if they spoke any louder their feelings would burst. “You?”
“Friend,” Chan sighed..
He laughed lightly. “It doesn’t get easier, does it?”
“Nope,” y/n chuckled, fiddling with the hem of their t-shirt. “I feel like every time it hits me I drown again.”
“They say it comes in waves.”
“Yeah,” y/n bit their lip as their eyes started to water, a lump building in their throat.
“Sometimes it’s unforgiving like a high tide and it completely floods and it drowns you,” Chan continued with a deep breath. “But sometimes it’s gentle and kind like the low tide on a shore on a quiet morning.”
A tear slipped passed y/n’s eye and they quickly brushed it away.
“I hate it, I really do.” their lip trembled. They inhaled shakily. “I just wish it would go away.”
“I know,” Chan said. “Me too.”
He couldn’t tell when the first tear had fallen, quickly wiping away the tears smudged on his cheeks. 
“I just don’t know how to deal with all of this pain that I have left, all of this love I have left for them. I don’t know where to put it. I don’t know how anyone lives with it. How the world just keeps spinning but I’m still stuck here.”
“I guess we just have to learn to live with it,” Chan whispered. “Slowly, step by step. We put the love we have left for them into the way we live.”
He paused, and breathed shakily. “Maybe by smiling a little more for them, or doing that crazy thing we’re scared of, just living more for them - because they would’ve wanted that for us.” His voice wavered, “They would’ve wanted us to be happy.”
Y/n sniffled. “You have a really good way with words.”
“Funny.” Chan laughed through his tears. “People say that a lot.”
“Sometimes, I feel really lost without them. I don’t know what to do. I don’t know what I’m doing with myself, with my life.” y/n spoke. “They used to be a call away and now, I don’t know what to do when I need them the most.”
“It’s hard, learning to live and grow.” Chan said. “As you get older, you grow apart or you have to learn how to keep growing on your own.” 
He sniffled. “But they’re always looking out for us, even when they’re gone. You just need to look for the signs.”
“Do you think they can see us from up there?”, y/n asked, looking back up at the sky.
“I think they do. They always watch over us, in the stars.” Chan pointed up in the far distance, to a small cluster of stars surrounding the moon. 
The two sat in silence again, both looking up at the stars, the moonlight washing over them with a soft glow, wrapping them in a gentle embrace.
“For what it’s worth, I think they would be really proud of who you are today.” Chan looked at y/n.
Y/n’s eyes welled with tears again. “You really think so?”
“I’m sure of it.”
“Thank you,” y/n said quietly. They glanced at Chan. “For what it’s worth, I know that they’re really proud of you too Chan.”
Chan remained silent for a moment, composing himself before he replied. “Thank you, y/n.”
They sat together quietly for a few more minutes, each allowing the other to feel their own heaviness in their chest, in their own time. 
After some time passed, the only sound heard was the distant chirp of crickets and their quiet breathing.
“Do you want to head back?”, y/n asked.
Chan looked back up at the moon and exhaled shakily. “I think I’d like to stay here for a bit longer, look at the stars a little more.”
“I think I’ll stay a little bit longer too.”
Up above them, in the light of the moon in the dark sky, a pair of stars shined a little brighter.
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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Pink Carnations - A Bridgerton Story
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ko-fi // m.list
pairing: Bridgerton Au! Chan x female reader
a/n: This was a labor of love honestly and I wanted to break out of my normal writing comfort zone so thank you all for giving me the platform to do that <3 I hope you all enjoy the first chapter. Please leave feedback!! It helps me out sm
Chapter One
Pink carnations lined the pathway to your house. That's how you knew spring was arriving. Long lines of pink. You'd push open your bedroom windows and breathe in the freshly cut grass, you'd let the warm breeze press past your hair, tickling your neck and shoulders.
It was your wedding day.
"Everyone is waiting downstairs, ma'am." A chambermaid squeaked from the doorway.
She was a new hire. A small, meek little thing that didn't talk much and avoided all eye contact. You had attempted many times to spark up a conversation with her, but all your efforts had fall flat thus far. You turned towards the door and gave her a firm nod. You took a deep breath in and made your way towards the stairs. Your dress swirled and swept across your legs as you moved.
You absolutely adored your dress. Long, flowing chiffon cascaded down your hips, falling to your feet at perfect length. A beaded corset swam up your waist and chest, while delicate lace fabric draped your shoulders, trickling down like a spring rain.
You counted your footsteps as you ascended down the staircase; one, two, three, four. Before you knew it, you were in the main hall of your family home. The kitchen staff had decorated every corner of the enormous mansion you called home. As you glanced around the room, there was only one person you were really looking for.
Chan was a potential suitor but he never pursued you. Gentlemen brought flowers to your door nearly every day. Bouquets of roses and purple tulips filled your room like something out of a fairytale. But he never sent so much as a flower petal.
"No carnations? Do these men not know you at all?" Your sister had notes the lack of your favorite flora.
Now it was your wedding day, a perfectly respectable man by the name of Felix Lee had asked for your hand in marriage. He came from a wealthy family
And had always treated you with the utmost respect. He was very well-liked in the town. Quite the charmer to the gaggle of ladies that had found themselves swarming him every chance they could. He had a beautiful smile and effortlesslessy gorgeous hair. You found yourself shrinking around him whenever he would speak, fearing that the light he exuded would burn you away.
But however magical Felix seemed, you still found yourself searching for Chan around every corridor. The whole town had been invited to this momentous occasion as Lady Whistledown had so affectionately called it.
She had gushed ansd gooned over the entire guest list, right down to the third cousin of the second aunt of the twice removed great uncle of… whatever. This was a spectacle. This was not for you. You were the eldest of your family. As your mother had never bore a son, the responsibility came down to you to marry someone in good standing to provide for your family. Although you would not live in this place anymore, your siblings and your parents would be well taken care of.
“The newest Whistledown has just arrived!” a valet ran into the dining hall with a small white paper in hand. 
“She’s writing on the day of your wedding? That has to be a good sign.” Your sister nudged your shoulder with hers.
The two of you shared a smile that quickly faded when you saw the shocked faces slowly peppering across the room. Judgemental eyes shot through you like rusty nails, leaving an infectious monster spreading through your entire body. Your mother crossed the marble floor to hand you the latest gossip. Your hands began to shake as you lifted the small sheet to your face.
Dearest, Gentle Reader, 
They say what is good for the goose is good for the gander, but what if the goose has taken a GANDER at another? This writer has heard a rumor most scandalous, about a certain Lady that has spent a significant amount of her time and attention on someone who is NOT her groom to be. A man in good standing is only considered as such if the company he keeps holds themselves to the same standards. Perhaps this bride may be having second thoughts?
taglist: @sugawhaaa @trixiekaulitz @chrizzztopherbang @cassidymb121 @roanns-posts @staysinbloom @yaorzu-blog @bubblebisk @cotton-candycloudz @beautyinhypnosis @domicaru @doohnut @strawberry31 @slxtmeri @newhope8 @tinyelfperson
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mgg-81 · 8 days
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Bahng Christopher Chahn 🐺
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