Tbh I Want To Write So Bad But I Have No Inspiration Or Motivation To Do So
tbh i want to write so bad but i have no inspiration or motivation to do so
More Posts from Juzaek
[10:23 PM] giving jisung a gazillion cheek kisses while calling him cute nicknames because heâs grumpy and pouty and super >:T
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9c18dae8833837e2f97a88a5a464bd1c/7767116202cf635b-be/s500x750/f0075dce1495580d3e5b786de93cad6699d753da.png)
THREE'S A CROWD â [preview].
SYNOPSIS. three of your friends fight for your affection, totally not because they like youâ but simply because they canât stand the idea of you liking someone else.
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/e82872895822279007e3566e51a67d68/7767116202cf635b-a8/s500x750/41a793c0aedccf372e0d81c808f7af462cd5a234.png)
PAIRINGS. jung sungchan, park wonbin, hong seunghan x female! reader. GENRE. college! au, rom-com, reverse harem, just a bunch of arrogant and silly little boys in denial, a collection of italicized oh moments in succession, featuring the rest of riize and nct. WARNINGS. swearing, explicit language, mild possessiveness, so much petty and childish behavior, drinking, breaking and entering, may add more in the full fic. WORD COUNT. preview: 3.2k | full fic: est. 15-18k.
RELEASE DATE. november to december. TAGLIST. send an ask/dm/reply to be added.
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/e82872895822279007e3566e51a67d68/7767116202cf635b-a8/s500x750/41a793c0aedccf372e0d81c808f7af462cd5a234.png)
NOTE. i said i'd do it. so i did. i am. and i'm having so much fun writing another shitstorm of a harem so i hope you find this as fun as i do HAHAHHAHA. sick and tired of seeing nothing but smut under the riize x reader tag so here is my contribution to society. you're welcome.
preview under the cut.
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/e82872895822279007e3566e51a67d68/7767116202cf635b-a8/s500x750/41a793c0aedccf372e0d81c808f7af462cd5a234.png)
THERE ARE CURRENTLY THREE HEADS IN THE MALE DORMITORY LOUNGE. One is Sungchan, tinkering with the foosball table by himself because the other two heads are refusing to play with him. Second is Wonbin laid comfortably on the couch, headphones on and using his lap as a drum set. Last is Seunghan, on the floor for some reason, and eyes trained intently on his phone with his thumbs tapping on the screen like a madman.
The number gets added when Sohee rushes in from the front door, a large McDonaldâs paper bag in hand and four large cups of soda in the other. âOrderâs here!â he announces. The three heads quickly pop up from their respective businesses and congregate to the dining corner of the room.
âFuck,â Sungchan groans, following the scent of the warm, freshly cooked mcnuggets on the table. The other three are already seated and poking holes in their soda cups. Sungchan is still groaning like a zombie. The two open nugget boxes are enticing him. He wonât . He must not. âI canât eat. I forgot I had dinner plans tonight.â
âWith a girl?â Sohee asks. The number of nuggets is depleting by the second. If the rest of the guys come down, there will be none left for him.
âYes,â Sungchan replies. He swallows hard. Wonbin takes the boot shaped chicken right before his very eyes. This is torture.
Seunghan scrunches his nose, mid-nugget. âBoo. You whore. Itâs guys night. How can you do this to us?âÂ
âA few nuggets canât hurt,â says Wonbin. He pokes the box closer to Sungchan.Â
âYouâre right. Move over.â
They snort at his flimsy conviction. Sungchan argues that he is simply experiencing the delicacies of both the east and the west tonight. Youâre supposed to have Japanese with him tonight. There is nothing wrong with cross-cultural enjoyment. He is simply diversifying his palate.
âSo, is it a date?â asks Seunghan.
âNo. Iâm just eating out with a friend.â
âJust the two of you?âÂ
Wonbin raises a brow with the question. Sungchan counts the numbers in his head. âYeah.â If he eats another nugget, then that would make it five. Five can be counted with only one hand. That isnât a lot. This is fine.
âOh man,â Sohee snickers. âYeah. Iâm pretty sure thatâs a date.â
âNo way!â he defends, the fifth and final nugget stuffed in his mouth. Sungchan swallows before continuing, wiping his hand on the pile of tissue papers on the table. âItâs not a date. I mean, she did tell me that she has a little crush on me, but itâs not a date.â
The three donât miss the slight curl of his lipsâ a bastardâs sly grin. Itâs a date. Itâs definitely a date. Seunghan gives him a hard smack on the back. âThe girl has a crush on you, how is it not a date, you piece of shit?â
âOw! Hey!â he glares at him. âIt really isnât! We even had a whole talk weâre keeping it strictly platonic. Iâm not interested in her in that way and she knows that. Iâm not doing anything wrong here!â
Thereâs both disappointment and judgment in Wonbinâs face. âQuit leading her on.â
Sungchan gasps. âIâm not!â
âWho is it anyway?â Sohee asks right before taking an obnoxious sip on his soda. âMaybe I know her.â
âWell, I doubt it,â he starts. âIâm pretty sure you guys donât know her, but sheâsââ
Your name stumbles out of Sungchanâs mouth. It falls quiet, save for Sungchanâs explanation that he met you through the soccer teamâs captain, Nakamoto Yuta, and that heâs known you for around half a year now. Youâre in different majors, but it turns out you have quite a lot of friends from his team, so you bump into each other a lot. Sungchan knew about your crush on him early into your acquaintanceshipâ which is why having dinner with you and just you isnât, âand shouldnât be that big of a deal! Itâs not a date. Seriously.â
âOkay, itâs not a date,â Sohee relents. Sungchan nods proudly at his victory.
âYes. It is not.â
âBut you know whatâs funnyââ Soheeâs eyes move to Seunghan. âThe girl you told me about has the same name. What a coincidence.â
Seunghan is sitting on the table like a mound of stone. Heâs got a half-eaten nugget in his hands. Heâs not putting it in his mouth. âThatâs right,â he simply says. Thereâs a faraway look in his eyes. âThat is pretty funny. What a coincidence.â Coincidence, Seunghan repeats in his head. Yes. It must be a coincidence. He nods to himself and throws the nugget remnants into his mouth, satisfied with that conclusion.
âWhat girl?â Wonbin rouses. Seunghan turns his head to him sharply.
âOh,â he says. âA friend from highschool.â
âA friend thatâs had feelings for him since highschool,â Sohee grins. âYou said she was pretty. Why didnât you two start dating?â
Is this the chickenâs fault? Why the heck does everything keep circling back to dating? âI donât know. Iâve just never seen her in that light,â Seunghan explains. He doesnât know why heâs getting riled up, but he is. âAnd just because someone confessed to you doesnât mean they want to start dating. Dude, I feel like youâre the one that should go and find a date. Being single is getting to your head.â
Seunghan has been friends with you since eleventh grade, being classmates and all. You confessed to him early into grade twelve, and even though he didnât return your feelings, it was never awkward because you never acted differently. In fact, sometimes he second guesses if it actually happened. Just a few days ago, he asked if you still like him to confirm. All you said was, âyeah, why?â and continued working on your assignment. Thatâs why sometimes he forgets. Thatâs why itâs not worth bringing up.
Until now, when your name suddenly keeps popping up. Wonbin utters the same. Seunghan and Sungchanâs head quickly snap towards him. âYou guys arenât talking about SM-ARTS Chairperson, right?â
SM-ARTS is an art organization in your university. Itâs been a well known org since its foundationâ half because of its achievements, half because of its stupid (smart) name. âThatâs...yes, that is her.â Seunghan gets a bad feeling. A really bad fucking feeling, and itâs not just having too much unhealthy chicken nuggets from McDonaldâs. âWhy? Do you also know her?â
âOf course I do. Iâm literally her Vice Chair,â Wonbin furrows his brows. This is strange. Heâs been working with you since the beginning of the year and youâve never mentioned a Jung Sungchan nor a Hong Seunghan before. Whatâs even stranger is their assertions that you have feelings for them. You. For them. Itâs a ridiculous thought to entertain because, âshe literally told me that he has a crush on me. What are you two talking about?â
Wonbin couldnât get a more direct confession than yours. Itâs typical for the rest of your org officers and members to tease the both of youâ the snickers and hollers when youâd call him to discuss something in private, the teasing saying you two look good together. Hell, some of the kids even call you both mom and dad and itâs gone to the point where heâs told them off to quit it because you might be uncomfortable. But youâd always say, âitâs fine,â and âyou didnât mind,â with a sweet smile on your face. Now, heâs no stranger to those insinuations, and for the sake of your professional relationship, he needed your denial or agreement.
Turns out, you do have a crush on him.
So this has become very, very awkward.
âMaybeââ Sungchan stammers. âMaybe...maybe weâre each talking about a different person, maybe thereâs actually three differentâ oh, hey. What are you doing here?â
Speak of the devil and she shall appear.
âHey!âÂ
The sound of your voice bouncing around the male dormitory walls feel foreign and jarring, especially after the conversation that had just transpired. You set down your bag on their couch, walking up to them with a bright smile that doesnât match their vibe at all.
Thereâs tension in the air. A very thick and palpable tension and the three are exchanging glances and looks as if to say, âGo on. Go say hi to her first if sheâs the girl youâve been talking about.â
But you beat them to it. âWow. I didnât think you three knew each other!â you exclaim, skipping over to the dining corner where you find yourself in the gap between Sungchan and Seunghan. The two flinch at the closeness of your presence. Wonbin tightens his jaw. âAnyway, is Shotaro around? I need to talk to him about our trip this weekend, but heâs not replying.â
âHeâs in his room. Upstairs. Fourth floor.âÂ
Itâs not a competition, but hearing how quickly the response falls out of Wonbinâs lips sure does makes it seem like it is. Sungchan has his mouth open, gives Wonbin a look, before closing it again. Seunghan never even got the chance, and Sohee is looking at the scene unfold like itâs a goddamned trashy movie.
âGreat, thanks!â you beam. âOh, and weâre still up for dinner tonight, right?â
They canât go for another speed contest because the question is reserved for one person onlyâ Sungchan, who seems to be caught off guard. âYeah. Absolutely,â he manages to squeeze out. You smile.
âSweet. Wonbin, have you prepared the documents I asked for tomorrowâs meeting?â
Itâs like a question carousel. âIâll send them later for you to review.â
âPerfect! Right, and Seunghanââ There goes another rotation. âMind driving me to the reunion this Friday? Jaeha bailed on me at the last minute, that son of a bitch.â
Seunghan blinks at you, in a daze. âSure.â
âNice! And youââ
Your attention lands on the last person at the table. Sungchan, Wonbin, and Seunghan didnât expect you to even entertain him. âSohee,â their friend fills in, a little taken aback. You flash him a bright grin.
âSohee! Nice to meet you! Love your necklace. Very chic.â
For some reason the smile on Soheeâs face is annoying to the other three boys. âThanks!â he says. âHave a nugget before you go.â They didnât think it was possible, but somehow your face glows even brighter and you lean down, still between Seunghan and Sungchan, to pick up a piece from the box.Â
âThought you guys would never offer. Thank you! Iâll see you around!â
With that you disappear up the stairs, and you take all the noise and the life in the room with you. Itâs quiet. So quietâ almost like thereâs a standoff. That is until Sohee clears his throat, still pink from the compliment you gave him, and says, âWell. Seems like sheâs the same person.âÂ
No fucking shit, sheâs the same person. They canât keep making excuses anymore.Â
Seunghan tries to play it off with a laugh. âI canât believe you guys would lie and joke about her having a crush on you.â His laugh isnât well taken by the other two. It spirals down to shit all too quickly.
âWhat do you mean âlieâ?â Wonbin narrows his eyes.
Sungchan hollers in. âYeah, if anything, youâre the one thatâs lying! You and him both!â
âWhy would I lie?!â Seunghan protests.
âI donât knowâ maybe because youâre jealous that she likes me and not either of you?â
Before they can start throwing fists, Sohee interrupts by making himself the collective target. âHave you guys considered,â he starts, hands solemnly pressed together above the crumb littered table. âThat she might have a tinge of feelings for all three of you? Not just one?â
They pause in consideration. It takes them five seconds to brush him off.
âThat doesnât make sense.â
âNo way.â
âWhy would she?â
Sohee sighs and gives up. He hears a set of footsteps rushing down and hopes itâs you, so that his three friends would finally quit it. It is you, and Sohee lifts up. Your timing is impeccable. Heâs almost convinced youâve been listening the whole time.
âHey,â you greet them once again, flashing a smile once, before going off to retrieve your bag from the couch. The three quiet down instantaneously and have resigned to glaring at each other in seething silence. Seunghan isnât very good at glaring at people, so he reorganizes his strategy instead.
âHowâs the thing with Taro hyung?â he asks, twisting his chair to face you better. Sungchan and Wonbin give him a dirty look. That bastard. Heâs even considering body language into play.
âOh! The trip is canceled.â You sling your bag over your shoulder. âSo my Sunday has been cleared. Do you guys want to make plans?â
Crap.
You just tossed them a bone.
Sohee is sure this isnât gonna end pretty.
âWhy donât we go on a date?â
All eyes are wide. Their heads snap in the direction of Wonbinâ the fast bastard. His expression is nonchalant, but his shaking knee from under the table says otherwise. âThereâs a contemporary art exhibit opening downtown. Letâs check it out together,â This bitch, Sungchanâs expression seems to say. Seunghanâs disappointment seeps through the air.
âLike. A date, date?â you confirm, eyes batting expectantly, as if you have a barrier against the palpably sour and rotten mood flooding the room in ominous swirls.
âYeah,â Wonbin confirms. Heâs lucky youâre too far away to notice the sweat dripping down his neck. âIs...is that a problem? You said you liked me. Why donât we give it a shot?â
All hell breaks loose the moment you entertain them with flustered cheeks and a shy smile.
âNo! Donât go!â Sungchanâs had it. He canât take this anymore. âIf thereâs anyone you should be going out with, it should be me! You like me! Not them!â
Seunghan has left his seat and has scrambled over to you. Wonbin and Sungchanâs eyes widen. They arenât letting him do this. They quickly follow suit but Seunghan already has a firm hold on your arms and is looking deep into your eyes. Heâs put up an invisible barrier. Fuck, that sneaky bastard.
âWere you actually serious when you said that you had a crush on me since eleventh grade?â His voice cracks. If heâs trying to tap into your pity, then itâs definitely fucking working. âBut why are these two saying you like them? What about us?! Am I nothing to yââ
Your index finger finds its way over Seunghanâs lips. Silence befalls. Your blank face settles into a sound smile.
âWell,â you pry Seunghanâs hands off you, still smiling pleasantly at all of them. What is this ominous feeling? Why doesnât it seem like youâre actually smiling at them? âAs far as I remember, none of you returned my confessions.â
Itâs like a hammer hits all three of them at once.
âAnd I still like you Seunghan. We literally talked about it the other day.â You gave him a two word answer then brushed him off your essay. That was hardly a conversation. Seunghan feels wronged beyond words.
âHowâhow about me?â
You look over to Sungchan, who looks arguably like a kicked puppy. âWhat about you?â
âWell,â he clears his throat, a faint blush coating his ears. âDo you still, uh, have feelings for me too, orââ
âSungchan, do you think Iâd have kept asking you to have dinner alone with me every week if I didnât like you?â He blinks. Beside him, Wonbin points a finger to himself. You let out a breath. âIâd be blind and tasteless if I wasnât into you, Wonbin. Especially after working closely together since the beginning of the year. Why are you guys asking me this?â
Sohee has stopped liking all these ominous periods of silence because theyâre signs that even more chaos is about to ensue. His three friendsâ eyes look empty and hollow as they stare at you. Oh god, theyâre far gone.
âSo,â Wonbin starts.
âYou like us,â Seunghan follows.
âLike all three of us,â Sungchan finishes.Â
You give them a smile reminiscent of a kindergarten teacher feeling a swell of pride after her student finishes reciting the alphabet. Sohee feels sympathy pains for his friends. âYup. I also have a crush on Johnny from med, but heâs graduating soon, so thatâs a bummer. Oh! And our TA Jung Jaehyun! He has the face of a god!â Oh, dear. You stomp on them then finish it off with a spit on their faces. Sohee bites his lip, feeling both horrendously bad and curious as to how this shitshow will conclude.Â
The three simmer in silence. You give them a raised brow.
âWhy? Is there a problem?â
Oh, thereâs a fucking problem, alright.
âWhy are you guys looking at me like that? I did confess to all three of you saying I have a crush on you, but I never said I was in love with you.â
Well, damn.
Neither of them like you like that, but that shit hurt for no fucking reason.
âDonât think too much of it, sillies! And I donât get why youâre all so affected when youâre the ones who didnât return my feelings.âÂ
Your laughter is poison and your smiling face is tearing them apart. Youâre heartless. Youâre a devil disguised as an angel. Youâre from the deepest depths of hell and have come to earth for the sole reason of tooth-achingly sweet and strawberry scented torment. If they can fall to their knees right now, they would, but their pride is tattered enough alreadyâ ripped to shreds by your unapologetic bluntness and honesty.
âAnyway, since I already have plans with the three of you within the week, Sungchanâs later this eveningââ The man in question is pouting. Heâs pouting very hard when your eyes skip over him, and zones into the person thatâs been quiet this entire time. âSohee! Wanna go bowling with me and my bio friends this Sunday?â
That was a bomb. A large and dangerous bomb. âSure?â Sohee responds unknowingly. You give them one last sweet smile of torture before finally leaving.
âGreat! Get my number from any of them. I have to go meet some people. Later! Thanks for the snack!â
With that, you leave them behind, but not without a trace of disaster. Once theyâve confirmed youâre gone and out, signaved by the tight shutting of the door, Sungchan, Wonbin, and Seunghan look at each other. Then at Sohee. Then back at the closed door once more.
Itâs quiet again. They donât need to talk to settle with three mutual conclusions.
One. Sohee isnât getting shit after the emotional massacre they went through. He can go crawl and scavenger for your number elsewhere for all they care.
Two. Thereâs no doubt. They all know you and you all know them. This is something they canât ignore anymore, so they have to figure out how to behave in case a run in like this happens again,
And threeâ
You like them. All three of them. At the same time.Â
Their pride canât stand the idea of sharing that affection. Absolutely not. Therefore three must drop down to one. Sungchan, Wonbin, and Seunghan are dead set on making sure that that one is going to be him.
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/e82872895822279007e3566e51a67d68/7767116202cf635b-a8/s500x750/41a793c0aedccf372e0d81c808f7af462cd5a234.png)
THREE'S A CROWD. Š hannie-dul-set, 2023.
![THREE'S A CROWD [preview].](https://64.media.tumblr.com/e82872895822279007e3566e51a67d68/7767116202cf635b-a8/s500x750/41a793c0aedccf372e0d81c808f7af462cd5a234.png)
you shouldve known a man so gentle and sweet was only hiding behind such a façade when you saw him with his lover. what did all the times you spent together mean to him? nothing, you could only guess. you wonder if it was fun for himâwatching you fall completely head-over-heels in love with the said man. bitterness had taken over you, cursing at yourself for being vulnerable in a relationship that was never labeled and the jealousy that came with seeing the man you love with the apple of his eye. you hated huang renjun. you hated huang renjun so much.
a nervous crush!jisung itching to hold your hand as you two walk side by side on your first date
champagne problems: part one

pairing: jake sim x f reader
genre: enemies to lovers, rich kids au, fake dating au, college au, angst, fluff
part one word count: 15.6k
part one warnings: swearing, alcohol consumption, family drama, a fatal case of second son syndrome
soundtrack: boom - dpr live / bad idea! - girl in red / blood on the floor - kuiper / calico - dpr ian / comme de garçons (like the boys) - rina sawayama / lust - chase atlantic
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ
The second son of a wealthy family, Jake Sim has gotten used to always standing in the shadow of his older brother. From grades to girls to talks of becoming future CEO of the Sim Corporation, heâs no stranger to coming in second place. So when an opportunity arises for Jake to finally have the one thing his brother canât and best him once and for all, he knows heâd be a fool not to take it.
There are only two problems. The first is that the thing his brother wants so badly isnât a thing at all. Itâs you, semi-estranged daughter of the Simsâ closest and most long-standing business partner.
The second is that Jake Sim canât fucking stand you.
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ
PART ONE
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ
Fingers wrapping around the stem of your wine glass, you sigh. Punctuality may have been a steep order for someone who you suspect is running dangerously low on both common sense and regard for others, but twenty minutes? Really?
Your eyes land on the obnoxiously ornate grandfather clock next to the hostess stand. In a restaurant with ceilings so high you can barely see them and a carefully curated ambience that practically screams old money, it blends right in. It also gives you an updated timeframe on your would-be dateâs tardiness.Â
Scratch that â thirty minutes.Â
Pulling out your phone, the absence of any new notifications is almost as annoying as whatever threadbare excuse youâre sure your date will offer you when he arrives. Glancing at the door, it remains devoid of any new patrons. Or perhaps rather if he arrives.Â
Youâre running near empty on both pinot noir and patience, and you use the distraction of your phone to make you seem a little less pathetic. As if this entire restaurant isnât already privy to the fact that youâre actively being stood up.Â
Well, you think wryly, at least you look good doing it. The off white ensemble you selected for the evening is Chanel, and vintage, at that. Usually you wouldnât pull out all the stops like this for something as flimsy as a first date, but men like James Sim have an eye for this kind of thing.Â
Four years your senior, heâs already carving out a name for himself at twenty-five. You suppose it is a little less impressive, though, when the name he was born with already carries a legacy of its own in the business world you usually do your very best to stay out of. Rumor has it heâs already a shoo-in for the next CEO of his fatherâs company. When nepotism is that blatant, you canât do much but scoff and raise a glass to it.Â
Scrambling for something to do to make your wasted time pass a bit quicker, you search up the social media profile of your would-be date. Honestly, you doubt you would learn anything more substantial about him if he actually bothered to show up than you will from scanning over his feed. In your experience, men like that tend to make up for their success on paper by lacking an actual personality and any sort of self-awareness.Â
Gym selfie. Scroll. Gym selfie from a slightly different angle. Scroll. Dog photo. Pausing, you suppress a small smile. The dog in the picture is pretty cute, if nothing else. Zooming in slightly, your eyes crinkle at the way the dogâs tongue lolls out of its open mouth in a grin. Well, at least heâs got that going for him, you suppose. A cute dog is enough to bump any guyâs ranking up a few points in your book.Â
If James Sim is nothing but a sum of his social media profile, itâs not like you expected anything else. After all, this is the heir to the Sim Corporation, a golden boy that was born with a crown on his head and a gold spoon in his mouth. Everything heâs earned has been laid out for him in painstakingly placed steps. His entire life has been guided by a heavy hand and the knowledge that he would one day inherit everything that makes his family worth knowing.Â
You probably wouldnât be too concerned with showing up to first dates on time, either. Especially since you doubt heâs ever been denied a second.Â
Tonight is nothing but a blip on a radar, youâre sure. Something for a secretary to schedule and him to notice a day or five late. Maybe if youâre lucky, someone on his team will send a consolatory bouquet once he does realize the mistake. He is still building his reputation, after all, and you could use a fresh set of flowers for your apartment.Â
With another slightly pitiful sigh and a final swig of wine, your glass is empty and your optimism is shot. A second glance at the clock says that thirty-eight minutes have now elapsed since your scheduled meeting time. And in your opinion, thatâs thirty-nine too late for a first date.Â
Retrieving your coat from the back of your chair, you figure tonight will be remembered as nothing but a waste of a good outfit. Besides, you suppose forty minutes of aimless scrolling is ultimately less painful than the inevitable headache this date surely would have been had he bothered to actually show up.Â
Suddenly, you frown. You wonât complain if this date never actually happens, but you may end up with a slight problem. Although you havenât been on the best of terms with your mother in a long time, tonight was meant to be the final bullet point on a list of favors you owe her.Â
As you pull your coat on, you consider the best way to frame the events of the evening. Lean into the whole âgetting stood upâ thing in an effort to earn some sympathy points? Lay out the facts in their most basic form, timestamps included? Emphasize the fact that you waited long past the obligatory twenty minutes for him to actually show up? Or leave your message chain as it currently is, tell her nothing at all, and let her assume what she wants?
Theyâre all equally iffy, you think. Risky in their own regard.Â
Signing your name at the bottom of the check, you scribble in a generous tip for the waitress who did her best to check on you often without making it obvious that she knew you were expecting company that never arrived, expertly skirting that line between overbearing and empathetic. At least someone will go home happy, you think, adding an extra zero for good measure.Â
Exiting the restaurant, you decide to make it two people. James Sim may be a hotshot at his fatherâs company, but youâll be damned before you let him ruin your evening. Before you order the Uber back to your place, you add an extra stop at your favorite sushi place. Takeout in the comfort of your own home will certainly be easier to enjoy than whatever Michelin-Star concoction you would have ordered here anyway, eaten in small bites between forced conversation topics, awkward pauses, and too long sips of wine.Â
And an hour later, youâre polishing off the last piece of an absolutely divine rainbow roll, wearing nothing but silk pajamas and a face mask, with old reruns of your favorite show playing on the TV when James Sim finally glances down at the Rolex on his wrist. Heâs finally arrived at the tail end of a meeting thatâs running so far behind schedule he has half a mind to just walk out of it. He would, too, if his father wouldnât actually threaten his life for it.Â
Itâs late, James realizes. Stupid late. So late that he wonât have the time or energy to do anything but pass out by the time he gets home, which really sucks, because he was genuinely looking forward to his date tonightâ
âFuck.â
All he can do is curse, even as the shocked faces of a concerning number of top executives turn to look at him all at the same time.Â
âŚ
Jake Sim is about to fail his econ midterm.Â
It will be at least a week before grades are released, but he already knows it. He can already feel it in the way the questions start to swim in his mind, making less and less sense the more he turns them over, in the way his gut fills with dread as the minute hand of the clock at the front of the lecture hall ticks closer and closer to the testing time limit.Â
And it wouldnât be that bad, if it werenât his second time repeating this course.Â
Oh, his father is going to have an absolute field day with this one. Jake can practically hear it now.Â
âYou failed your midterm? After already failing this course twice? You know, James was actually the top scoring student in his economic section. Dr. Jeong still mentions his term paper every time I see him at the universityâŚâ
And thatâs if heâs in a good mood. Or rather, if things at the company are going well. Jake doesnât even want to consider the comments heâll be on the receiving end of if the news of his failure finds his father already agitated.Â
Exhaling, he gives his exam one final once-over, scanning for completion more than accuracy. His brain is so fried that he knows itâs of little use to him now. For his own sake, the best thing to do at this point is turn his test in and send a silent prayer to whoever might be listening on his way out the door.Â
Leaving the lecture hall behind him, Jake puts his phone out of airplane mode and frowns at the two notifications that pop up on his screen. The first is a missed call from his brother, and the second is a message from the same sender, requesting that he give him a call when he has the chance.Â
Considering that itâs neither his birthday nor a major holiday, Jake is more than a little confused. Regardless, he honors the request, pressing his phone to his ear as he begins the walk back to his apartment. Although itâs significantly less spacious than his childhood home, he finds it far more welcoming in more ways than one.Â
The outgoing call rings once, twice, three times. Jake is about to be annoyed at the missed connection, but his brother answers in the moments just before heâs sent to voicemail.
âHey, Jake.â Shocking. He actually bothered to check the caller ID.Â
âHey.â Jakeâs voice is careful, guarded. Itâs not like his personal life is of any importance to his older brother, but heâs not in the mood to answer any questions. He wonât give James any reasons to ask. âI saw your message.â
âRight.â Jake can hear the shuffle of other voices, scattered movements coming from the other line. James sounds busy. Just like always. Usually, that would usually mean heâs distracted. But Jake has the odd feeling that he has his brotherâs undivided attention when James adds, âI have a favor to ask you.â
Immediately, Jakeâs stomach drops. There are very few things in this world that are not within James Simâs grasp, and even less that are within Jakeâs, relatively speaking. Whatever it is, he must be desperate, if heâs willing to enlist the help of his little brother.Â
âOkay.â Jakeâs voice betrays none of his sudden anxieties. âWhat is it?â
At least James spares him the agony of suspense. âYou know ___, right?â
Jake frowns. Sure, he knows of you. Just like he has a vague idea of every one of his familyâs business partners and their immediate kin. Particularly the ones that are the same age as him and attend the same university. But itâs not like heâs close with you, not like heâs ever had an actual conversation of any substance with you.Â
Especially since the minimal interactions the two of you have had did not leave Jake wanting more. The only child of parents whose last name is on the front of the most successful law firm within a thousand mile radius, you strike him as everything heâd expect you to be.Â
Spoiled. Entitled. Vapid. Out of touch with any version of reality that doesnât consist of you getting everything you want at the exact moment you want it. He supposes itâs a bit like the pot calling the kettle black, considering his own upbringing, but heâd like to think that heâs earned what heâs been given, at least partially. Especially since most of it has been his brotherâs hand-me-downs. And itâs not like his father has ever been in the habit of doing him any favors that donât come wrapped in criticism, comparison, and disdain.
Although rumor does have it you and your mother havenât been on speaking terms since you left for university, Jake imagines itâs probably because you wanted to bring the limited edition Versace to campus with you, and she insisted it would be safer at home.Â
Oh, well. Whatever designer dispute happened between you and your mother is no skin off his back. Jake has his own problems to worry about.Â
One of them being his brotherâs question that still lingers on the other line.Â
Weighing responses in his head, Jake finally settles on, âI guess.â Itâs his best attempt at being noncommittal.Â
Unfortunately, it doesnât do anything to dissuade his brother. âDo you have her number by chance? My secretary should have taken it down, but she canât find it anywhere.â
Jake balks, footsteps faltering. An equally distracted student walking behind him nearly stumbles right into his back. Wordlessly, Jake sends them an apologetic look before clarifying, âHer number? Like, her personal phone number?â
âWhat other kind of number is there?â And thereâs the James that Jake knows. Annoyed at the perceived incompetencies of his younger brother, just as always.Â
Suddenly, Jakeâs patience is running short too. James is the one asking for a favor and still has the gall to be annoyed with him. Typical. Jakeâs words are clipped when he says, âNo, I donât have ___âs phone number.âÂ
Jake expects that to be the end of it, but his brother wonât let it go so easily.Â
âSeriously? Donât you two go to the same school?â
Jake rolls his eyes. âRight, because I have the entire student body on speed dial.â
Thereâs a pause on the other end. Jake half expects his brother to just hang up on him. After all, heâs never been able to take what he gets, to swallow what he dishes out.Â
What Jake does not expect, however, is the way James sounds so tentative when he speaks again. âWellâŚâ
âWell what?â Patience already running thin, itâs all he can do not to snap.Â
âDo you think you could get it for me?â
Jake must be dreaming. This must be a post-exam punishment, a hallucination brought on by over exerting his brain too far for too long. âDo I think I could get ___âs phone number for you?â he repeats flatly.Â
âIs there an echo in here?â Asshole. At least heâs consistent.Â
âJust an echo chamber,â Jake mutters away from the receiver.Â
âWhat was that?â
âNothing.â Jake stops for a moment to fiddle with his keyring as he walks up the stairs to his apartment. âNo, I canât get her phone number for you.âÂ
âWhy not?â
The key wonât line up quite right. Jake tries again, frustration seeping through. âBecause I have better things to do than run stupid errands for you. Why donât you drive here and get it yourself?â
âTrust me, if I thought sheâd give it to me, Iâd be there in an hour.â
The lock on his door finally clicks open, and Jake all but throws his bag down after kicking off his shoes. âAnd what the hell makes you think sheâd give it to me?â
âWell, you didnât accidentally stand her up, for one.â James doesnât sound embarrassed by it. Just matter-of-fact. Like a date is nothing but a business deal. Something to be rescheduled and redone if negotiations go sour the first time around.Â
It is enough to stir up some of Jakeâs curiosity, though. âYou went on a date with ___?â He supposes it makes sense. Even if the rumor mill and its rumblings about your rocky relationship with your mother ring true, youâre still your parentsâ daughter. Still a perfect match on paper for the future CEO of the Sim Corporation. The king of a company and princess of a law firm. Itâs a match made in heaven, he thinks ruefully.Â
âNo, I didnât. Thatâs kind of the whole point here.â
âWhatever.â Jake still doesnât see what the hell he has to do with all this. âWhy donât you just look up her parentsâ number in the company database and get it from them?â
Jake can practically feel his brotherâs exasperation through the phone. âRight, because that would go over really well. Hi there," he imitates. âIâd like to make your daughter the mother of my future children. Care to pass along her phone number so I can get started on that?â
Jake suppresses a wince. âJesus. I see why she stood you up.â
âShe didnât. I stood her up,â James clarifies. âOn accident.â
Semantics. And not ones that Jake is interested in. âEither way. Iâm not getting her number for you.â
âYeah?â Jake is unsettled by the way thereâs still no trace of defeat in his brotherâs voice. Thereâs something almost sinister when he suddenly switches topics. âHow are classes going?â
Jakeâs lips pull into a taut line, disaster of an econ midterm still fresh on his mind. âFine.â
âReally? Even econ? Third timeâs the charm and all that?â Well, at least his brother can be counted on to consistently be an asshole.
âWhy do you care?â The only thing Jake wants to do is end this call and crawl into bed for a well-deserved afternoon nap. Let his subconscious spare him from thoughts of his older brother and econ and you for at least a little bit.Â
James has other plans. âYou must have taken the midterm recently, right?â Jakeâs silence is confirmation enough. âYou know, the only thing Dr. Jeong weighs more heavily than the midterm is the final paper at the end of the semester.â
A minute ago, Jake thought you were the last thing he wanted to talk about. The sudden shift in direction in this conversation is starting to prove him wrong. If thereâs one thing Jake would rather discuss even less than his older brotherâs dating life, itâs school. âWhat does that have to do with aââ
âAnd I think I still have my copy of the paper that earned me the top score in my entire section.â The smugness is practically palpable. âI might have to do some digging, but Iâm sure itâs in my old files somewhere.â
Jake rolls his eyes, wishes the immediate comparison werenât the first thing to rise to the forefront of his mind. Wishes it didnât find him so lacking. Wishes it wasnât narrated in the voice of his disappointed father. âIf youâre trying to gloat, itâs nââ
âIâm trying to strike a deal. Jesus, no wonder youâre on track to be a super senior getting a business degree.â
âThis is my third year,â Jake defends indignantly.Â
âAnd your third attempt at econ, which I passed in my first year.â He sounds like heâs settling a little too well into the CEO role when he proposes, âIâm trying to make it your last attempt.âÂ
Jake would be lying if he said his curiosity werenât piqued, even just slightly. âWhat are you saying?â
âIâm saying, little brother, that my term paper, my notes, all of it, are yours.â It sounds too good to be true. It has to be too good to be true. James is a lot of things, but generous and helpful are very rarely any of them. âAs soon as you get me ___âs number.â And there it is.Â
Jake hangs up without bothering to dignify that with a response and hopes it sends a strong enough signal of his refusal. Then, he falls into his bed face-first with a groan.Â
And a week later, when his econ midterm results are finally posted, the first thing Jake does is let his head fall on his desk with an alarmingly loud thud that has Jay poking his head in the door to make sure everythingâs okay. The second thing he does, a solid twenty minutes later, is send his older brother a text.Â
Jake [7:21pm]: You better start digging through those old files.Â
âŚ
All things considered, youâre easier to track down than Jake expects. The university campus is big, and judging from the way he canât remember ever seeing you in a class, the two of you donât share a major. But the similarities in your social status mean youâre bound to run in some of the same circles, and Jake is able to use this to his advantage.Â
Ultimately, it takes very little digging on his part. First, he mentions your name to Jay in the middle of an upper body superset in the university gym. Jay frowns, setting the weights back on the rack.Â
âThat name sounds familiar. I think maybe Heeseung knows her?â
That tidbit takes him to Wednesday night, which always finds Jake in the library at a statistics study group Heeseung also makes a habit of attending. On their way out for the evening, Jake stops him by the door.Â
â___?â Heeseung pauses for a moment in contemplation. âIâm pretty sure sheâs friends with Sunghoon.â
And the third piece of the puzzle proves a bit more difficult to click into place. Sunghoon is harder for Jake to find, at least in a way that comes across naturally. Much like yours, Park Sunghoon is a name Jake hears in passing more than anything. Heâs a friend of friends, a mutual acquaintance that Jake has never really had a conversation with and certainly doesnât know well enough to interrogate for your phone number.Â
But his most recent midterm score is still looming over his head, and the thought of retaking econ again is so nightmarish it sends a shiver down his spine every time he considers it. At this point, there isnât much Jake wouldnât put on the line to pass the damn class. Including his pride, apparently.Â
So when Jake hears from Jay who hears from Heeseung that Sunghoon will probably be at the party Epsilon Nu Eta is throwing this Friday night, he starts to formulate a plan.Â
And he starts to regret said plan less than twenty-four hours later when he finds himself on the doorstep of a frat party. A frat party. He canât remember the last time he came to one of these things. At twenty-one, he already feels geriatric as he tugs self-consciously at the sleeves of the plan black long sleeve he put on for the occasion. Something that will hopefully hide the questionable stains heâll inevitably leave with.Â
Entering through the front door with hinges that donât align quite right, Jake has one mission in mind: find Park Sunghoon. Find him and somehow convince him to pass along your number. Thereâs a fine line to be walked there, Jake thinks. If he comes across as too eager, it will just be creepy. Nonchalance is the name of the game, but heâs never been good at keeping his cards close to his chest.Â
For Jake, itâs a tall order, which means the only detour heâll allow himself is grabbing a cup of lukewarm beer from the kitchen before he sets out looking for Sunghoon. The alcohol is an effort to break the barrier of his inhibitions more than anything. To make what heâs about to do feel a little less painful.Â
Making his way out of the kitchen, Jake wanders aimlessly for a few minutes. He doesnât know much about Sunghoon, other than the fact that he competes for your universityâs figure skating team and is undeniably handsome. A good-looking figure skater, Jake thinks as he turns down yet another crowded hallway, narrowly avoiding spilling his drink. Where would one of those be hiding?Â
He spends a few more awkward minutes asking around to no avail. Just when heâs on the verge of saying fuck it and making some sort of sacrifice to the econ gods instead, Jake bumps into the man of the hour on his way to the bathroom.Â
In the chaos, Jake doesnât recognize him until itâs almost too late. âHey,â Jake calls out, bladder all but forgotten for now. Heâs trying to fake an air of coolness when he adds, âSunghoon, right?â
âYeah.â Jake thanks his lucky stars that Sunghoon must be at least two drinks in, because he doesnât seem weirded out at all by the sudden question from a near stranger.Â
âIâm Jake.â He reaches his arm out for a handshake. Blinking, Sunghoon just stares at his outstretched hand as long, awkward moments bleed into each other. Eventually, Jake just lets it fall back to his side. âIâm, uh, in a statistics class with Heeseung.â
âRight on,â Sunghoon nods, still unsure if this conversation has a point to it. Luckily, the pleasant haze clouding his thoughts means he doesnât mind too much either way.Â
Jake figures thereâs no point in dragging this out by exchanging more pleasantries, and he has the feeling Sunghoon might start forgetting his own name, much less yours, if he lets this continue for too long.Â
âListen,â Jake starts, trying to sound as not creepy as possible. âI heard that you know ___ pretty well.â
Sunghoon just shrugs. Jake canât tell if heâs succeeded. âYou could say that.â
âI know this is a strange request, but, uh,â Jake scratches the side of his head, âis there any chance I could get her number? I promise not to do anything weird.â Word vomiting, the extra details are spilling out before he can stop them. âItâs not even for me, actuallyââ
Sunghoon spares him the rest of a rambling explanation. âSorry, bud. No can do.â
Jakeâs stomach tightens in panic. He really, really just needs your phone number. It has him forgetting his earlier inhibitions, throwing caution to the wind even if heâs making a bit of a fool of himself in the process. âItâs for something important, actually. Iâm kind of desperateââ
Sunghoon just puts a consolatory hand on Jakeâs shoulder, interrupting his train of thought. âLook, man, itâs nothing against you personally, but I have literally never met you in my life. Besides, if I gave out ___âs number to every random guy that asked, Iâm pretty sure sheâd shave my head.â Sunghoon leans in close, like heâs about to share a secret. Jakeâs nose twists at the scent of alcohol on his breath. âAnd between you and me, I donât think I could pull off being bald.âÂ
Jake kind of begs to differ, but thatâs neither here nor there. He opens his mouth to plead his case again, but Sunghoon doesnât even let him get a word out.Â
âSorry, man, but I really canât help you.â Pausing for a moment, he considers. âYou said your name was Jacob, though, right?â He doesnât pause long enough for Jake to correct him. âI could ask her if sheâs cool with giving you her numberââ
âWhose number are you giving out?â And if Jake thought this conversation wasnât enough of a train wreck already, trust the timing of your entrance to be more disastrous than divine.Â
Eyes turning to you and your sudden intrusion on the conversation, Jakeâs mind goes blank for a minute. And yeah, he kinda gets why his brotherâs so hellbent on having a second chance at your time. Dressed in all black, your hair is loose around your face. Even though it likely costs more than most peopleâs monthly paycheck, thereâs nothing inherently special about what youâre wearing. Still, Jake is finding it exceedingly difficult to look away.Â
Itâs something in your aura, he thinks. In the way you carry yourself. Something that money canât buy. Something that makes his gaze want to linger.Â
â___!â Sunghoon grins, wrapping an arm around your shoulder, wobbling slightly. You jostle at the sudden impact, inching away from where the contents of his cup slosh dangerously close to the rim. âWhat a coincidence. We were just talking about you.â
Your brow creases in confusion. Jake tracks the miniscule movement with parted lips.Â
âYou were?â
âYeah,â Sunghoon confirms, just at the same moment Jake shakes his head, âNo.â
Turning your mildly concerned gaze away from your friend, you glance at Jake for the first time. Brow furrowing further, you cock your head to the side as your lips part in partial recognition. He looks oddly familiar, but you canât quite place him. âDo I know you?â
âNo.â Jake shakes his head again, a little too fervently. âI donât think weâve ever met. At least not properly.â
Itâs an odd way of putting it. Youâre about to ask him to clarify when Sunghoon cuts in, clearing up the confusion for you. âItâs Jacob,â he says, as if that should mean anything to you. Turning back to the boy across from him, he adds, âJacob Sim, right?â
And that clicks things into place. Â
âSim?â you echo, realization dawning on your features.
âYep,â Sunghoon confirms.Â
Across from you, Jake says nothing. He doesnât think he could if he wanted to. In fact, heâs pretty sure his life is flashing before his eyes.Â
âSim,â you repeat one final time, jaw ticking in agitation as everything starts to settle. âI do know you.â
âOh, really?â Sunghoon asks at your side, oblivious to the way your tone betrays obvious animosity. A distaste so palpable Jake can practically feel it radiating off of you. Turning back to Jake, heâs apologetic. âSorry, Jacob. I guess I could have given you her number, then.â Sunghoon smiles sheepishly, as if he hasnât just made things a million times worse. âMy bad.â
Jakeâs eyes widen in horror as he scrambles for some sort of defense, an explanation that will dig him out of this rapidly deepening hole, but you beat him to it.Â
âMy number?â The look you give him has a concerning amount of venom in it. âSeriously? God, why are all you Sim men so obsessed with me?â
âThatâs notââÂ
âFirst your brother views my LinkedIn profile twenty-three times after standing me up, and now youâre harassing my friends for my phone number?â
âHold on. Iâm not harassing anyoneââ
âNo,â Sunghoon agrees, nodding diplomatically. âJacob was perfectly pleasantââ
âItâs Jake, actually.â
âOh, really?â
âYeah, just Jake.â
âSorry,â Sunghoon apologizes. Turning to you, he tries mediating again. âWell, like I said, just Jake was perfectly pleasantââ
âI donât care how pleasant he is.â Your glare somehow becomes icier. âLeave me alone, and tell your dickhead brother to do the same.â Muttering to yourself more than anything, you add, âThe last thing I need right now is you practically stalking meââ
âStalking you?â Jake flounders, an edge of annoyance creeping into his tone. Heâs not surprised to learn that you really do think the world revolves around you, but really? Stalking? âDonât flatter yourself. Itâs not like Iâm enjoying this interaction any more than you are.â
You donât back down, crossing your arms over your chest. The movement has Sunghoon teetering dangerously where he leans on you, but you pay him no mind, attention focused solely on the man in front of you. âThen why do you want my phone number so bad?â
âLike I was trying to say earlier when you wouldnât let me get a word out sideways,â Jake bites, âitâs not for me. I made a deal with someone, and I told them Iâd give them your number.â
Your gaze narrows. âWho?â
âWhat?â
âWho did you make a deal with?â
Jake hesitates, knowing how the truth will sound. Screw it â a lie would likely be just as damning. Still, it takes him another pregnant pause to eventually admit, â... My brother.â
Scoffing in disbelief, you double down on your ire. âAbsolutely not.â Shaking Sunghoon off your shoulder, you turn to leave, dragging him with you. Jakeâs eyes close; he canât bear to watch his last chance at passing this semester leave him in the dust. Â
So much so that he pleads again, âWait, ___. Please.â Jake is begging now, and he feels a little pathetic for it. Still, he canât help the way desperation drives him to continue. âYou can block him for all I care. I canât explain everything, but my life is quite literally in your hands right now. I just needââ
âNo.â The single syllable vibrates with finality. âDo I have to spell it for you? N-â you bite, enunciating so sharply Jake thinks you might draw blood. âO. No. Iâm not giving my number to you or your flake of a brother or anyone else that so much as looks like they might have the name Sim.â
God, is the only think Jake can think as he miserably watches your retreating figure, Sunghoon stumbling along as you drag him with you. I am so fucked.Â
âŚ
When Sunghoon finally emerges from your guest bedroom an hour before noon the next day, itâs to ask if youâd be kind enough to spare him some Advil. Even with a bad case of bedhead and the aftermath of overconsumption, he still manages to look good, albeit a little lifeless.Â
âIâll do you one better,â you tell him, but reach for the small white bottle anyway, shaking out a few tablets and offering them to your best friend along with a glass of cold water.
âBagels and coffee?â Sunghoon asks over the rim of his glass, with a little more alertness in his eyes than there was moments before.Â
âBagels and coffee,â you confirm. A tried and true hangover cure, if there ever was one. And even though your head is feeling nice and clear, thanks to your trusty two drink limit that has yet to fail you, the local cafe a block from your apartment is very rarely something you turn down.Â
Thirty minutes later and a change of clothes later, the two of you are trading gossip and stealing bites of each otherâs orders when the other person isnât looking at the table in the back corner of the cafe. Sunghoon is just about to stuff another piece of your bagel in his mouth when he notices yet another notification light up the screen of your phone.Â
Sunghoon nods towards where it rests on the table, bagel suddenly forgotten. âIs that your mom again?â
âYep.â Your lips stretch thin. You donât even need to glance down at your phone to confirm. Sheâs been blowing up your notifications all weekend. âSheâs been on my ass about the upcoming fundraiser event for days now. And reminding me about the utmost importance of bringing an appropriate plus-one.â
Across from you, Sunghoon straightens his shoulders. âI suppose it is about time I bust out the trusty old prom suit again.â
You sigh, sending your half-eaten bagel a forlorn glance. âI wish. She told me if I ever bring you again, I lose half my trust fund.â
âWhat?â Sunghoon looks affronted. âWhy?â
You level him with a look. âDoes soap ring a bell?â
Sunghoon splutters in indignation. âThat was one time,â he defends. âAnd anyone would have thought those were edible! They were shaped like candies, and they were on a platterââ
âSoap presentation aside, I donât think that excuse will work on her.â The dejection in your voice is apparent. âBesides, sheâs already made it very clear that youâre explicitly forbidden from attending any future family events as my plus-one.â
âWhatever,â Sunghoon grumbles. âKeep all your stupid inedible soaps.â Pausing for a moment, he realizes that still leaves a giant question hanging in the air. âWho are you gonna bring, then? You know, it kind of is too bad your date with Sim number one didnât pan out.â
You shrug, pointedly ignoring the way your phone screen lights up yet again. It really is a bit of a shame James turned out to be an unreliable flake. One that still hasnât bothered to apologize to you or even give any sort of indication that he remembered your scheduled date. Still, you canât think of anyone that would earn your motherâs approval faster. âIâll probably just fake a stomach flu.â After all, youâre kind of out of options. âI thought about asking Jungwon, but heâs got stuff going on for his internship that night. A big economics conference or something.â
âSpeaking of economics,â Sunghoon leans in conspiratorially. âI think I might have some intel on our new friend from last night.â
âHow was economics the segue you went with? We were literally just talking about his older brother.â Giving him a look of disbelief, you add, âAnd what about that interaction gave you the impression that weâre friends?â
âWhatever,â Sunghoon brushes you off before he continues, âAnyway, I heard from Heeseung who heard from Jay that apparently little Sim is hot garbage at economics. Rumor has it heâs already failed the class twice and is on track to do it again.â
Youâre not sure why heâs deemed this information relevant to you, but youâd be lying if you said it werenât a little amusing.Â
âReally? Jungwonâs taking it now too, and he said that he sleeps through half the lectures and is still pulling an A.â
Sunghoon rolls his eyes. âWell, we canât all be prodigies.â
Your lips flatten. âPretty sure you donât have to be a prodigy to not fail an entry level course three times.â
âHey, cut him some slack,â Sunghoon argues. âHeâs only failed it twice as of now.â
You scoff, entirely uninterested in the gory details of Jake Simâs academic failures. âWhatever.â
âEither way,â Sunghoon says, âJay told Heeseung who told me thatâs why heâs so desperate for your number.â Confusion makes itself known on your features. You still donât see the connection until Sunghoon adds, âApparently he made some sort of deal with his brother that if he gets him your phone number, heâll help him pass econ.â
A beat of silence passes between you. The barista at the counter calls out a customerâs name. Itâs all you can do to not let your jaw physically drop open, mostly becauseâ
âThat is probably the most ridiculous thing Iâve ever heard in my life.â Glaring at Sunghoon, you canât believe the theatrics of it all. âHow many times have I told you to stop believing everything Heeseung says?â
âTechnically, Jay said it,â Sunghoon corrects. âAnd I donât know... It kind of makes sense when you think about it.â
You beg to differ. âIt absolutely does not. What is this, middle school? Are we passing notes behind the teacherâs back and making our friends ask our crushes if they like us back?â Itâs ridiculous. Absolutely, utterly ridiculous.Â
There is no way. Absolutely no way that James Sim, heir to a multimillion dollar company, is wasting his time giving his little brother an economics cheat sheet in exchange for your phone number.Â
Sunghoon raises his hands in mock surrender. âDonât shoot the messenger. I just thought you might be curious.â
And you hate to admit it, but you kind of are. Even though every ounce of logic youâve accumulated in twenty-one years of life tells you that Heeseung is a notorious gossip whose stories are just as much fiction as reality and your best friend is no better. Even though the whole thing makes absolutely no sense at all.Â
Even though you repeat it to yourself over and over for the rest of the day, that damn curiosity is still there. Pestering you and disturbing your sleep and leaving you wondering if maybe, just maybe, some things are entirely too ridiculous to be anything but true.Â
âŚ
On Wednesday night, Jake and Heeseung are in the middle of a particularly brutal probability set when a sudden shadow looms over their favorite corner table on the third floor of the library.Â
Glancing up, Jake finds Heeseungâs gaze already trained somewhere over his shoulder. Jake canât quite tell if the look on his face is confusion or terror.Â
âMind if I join?â The request comes from behind him, posed in an oddly familiar voice. Heeseung is nodding in agreement before Jake has the chance to so much as turn around and identify the intruder.Â
All is revealed soon enough, though, when you slide down into the seat next to him, ignoring the way Heeseung scrambles to move his things and make room for you in the seat next to him. Instead, you busy yourself with setting your bag on the floor and pulling out your laptop.Â
Itâs all Jake can do to stare at you blankly. This evening, youâve traded the all black outfit from the other nightâs party for something a bit more casual, something comfortable that blends in better to the background of a university library. The sudden proximity also means that the scent of your perfume is quick to waft over towards him.Â
Jake does his best to hold his breath before his brain can trick him into thinking he likes it.Â
âStop looking at me like that.â A bold request for someone who just hijacked a study session and sat down with no explanation, but Jake wouldnât expect anything less from you.Â
âLike what?â The words are out before he gives them permission. Across the table, Heeseung is staring too, but all three of you know the command isnât for him.Â
âI donât know.â Glancing at the battery bar hovering just above empty, you dig around in your bag for a moment for your laptop charger. Jake notes that you still have yet to look at him. Instead, you begin to busy yourself with typing something on your computer. âJust stop it.â
He hopes you can feel the way his eyes burn holes into the side of your head as his blank stare shifts into a glare.Â
Heeseung glances between the two of you. His outburst is sudden. âOh! I just remembered.â He hits his head for good measure. The acting is wasted on this audience, though. Neither of you pay him any mind or even bother to glance in his direction. âI have to go, uhâŚâ he trails off, finishing lamely with a rather flat, âsomewhere else.â
âGreat.â Your eyes donât leave your screen, fingers still flying on your keyboard. âSee you later.â
As Heeseung scrambles to pack up his unfinished statistics homework and high tail it out of the library, the air that has suddenly become stifling, Jake glances down at where your fingers are still moving.Â
Distractedly, he wonders how you can type so fast with nails that long, how you never seem to need the backspace key. How none of the pastel pink that coats your fingernails seems to be so much as chipped. A projection of perfection, he thinks, down to every last detail. Â
Moments pass, neither of you saying anything.
You still havenât looked at him by the time you do eventually break the impasse. âI heard you suck at econ.â
And Jake actually cannot believe you. âDid you seriously hunt me down just to rub it in?â
âRub it in?â That at least earns him some of your attention, even if it is just a brief, confused glance as your fingers pause in their typing. âItâs not like Iâm the reason you canât pass.â
âBelieve it or not, you quite literally are.â
You sigh, removing your hands from your keyboard entirely. Then, before he can blink, you spin your entire body in your chair, eyes, shoulders, and knees all directly trained on him. Jake canât help the way he flinches back a few inches at the sudden change in pace.Â
âLook,â you start. He can already tell by the way you wrap the single syllable sound in patronization that heâs not going to appreciate whatever youâre about to say. âI can tell that youâre not used to, like, having conversations with people, but usually what happens is you give someone enough information so that they know what youâre talking about.â Heâs right.Â
And heâs quick to defend himself. âMaybe I could, if youâd let me get three words out without interrââ
But youâve moved on already. âIs the whole âdeal with your brotherâ thing true?â
Jake lets the silence linger for a moment, looking at you in disbelief. âYou literally just proved my point.â
You roll your eyes. âI knew what you were going to say, so I sped things along. Now answer my question.â You lay it out for him again. This time, even more directly. âDid you try to get my number because of some deal you made with your brother?â
Heâs not sure why it sounds so ridiculous, narrated back to him in your voice. Itâs not like it was a brilliant, foolproof plan to begin with, but the way you present it has him feeling about five inches tall.Â
âIâŚâ
âItâs a yes or no question.â You really donât beat around the bush, he thinks.Â
âYes, okay?â
Looking behind you, you suddenly lean in a little closer. Itâs all Jake can do not to flinch back again. Bringing your hand up to cup your mouth, itâs like youâre about to divulge a terrible secret when you whisper, âYouâre that bad at econ?â
Jake just sighs. âWorse, probably.â
Frowning, you pull back a few inches. âArenât you a business major? Isnât econ, like, pretty important for you?â If he were thinking clearly, Jake might wonder how you know that. But that only thing his mind has space for right now is annoyance. At you, at this exchange, at the way you so easily pick through his flaws and seem to have no problem laying them bare at his feet like he doesn't already know them intimately.
âYeah, well, itâs not like I got any say in my major,â Jake counters. He might have more patience for this conversation if he were having it with anyone but you, if you werenât throwing his own insecurities back in his face with every follow-up question.
At that, something flickers through your eyes. Sympathy, maybe. âFair enough.â Whatever it is, itâs gone before he can identify it. And itâs not enough to make you pull your punches. âStill though, thatâs probably the stupidest thing Iâve ever heard.â Jake doesnât need the reminder. âJust get a tutor like everyone else.â
The thing is, Jake has thought about it. On more than one occasion. Heâs even gotten so far as filling out the university tutor request form. He just could never quite bring himself to complete the âNameâ field without all of the potential consequences forcing him to hit backspace.Â
He might not be his brother, but heâs not stupid enough to think that his family would ever be okay with the Sim name anywhere near a tutor form. He tells you as much. âAnd listen to my dad tell me how much of a disappointment I am for not being able to even take a class on my own?â Jake laughs humorlessly. âNo thanks.â
A beat passes. Two. Youâre not done yet, but you at least have the decency to sound a little apologetic, a little tentative when you say, âNot to kick you while youâre down or anything, but I mean, that has to be better than failing twice.â
Jake just shakes his head. âYou donât know my father.â
You shrug but donât press the matter further. Truth be told, you donât know his father, but you do know fathers like him. You have one of your own. The third floor of the library doesnât seem like the place for that conversation, though, even if youâve already uncovered more than your fair share of each otherâs secrets in the last ten minutes. âI guess not.â
âŚ
Your phone is buzzing far too incessantly for a Saturday morning, much less this early on a Saturday morning. Internally, you curse Friday night you, who forgot to switch it into do not disturb before falling asleep. Face still buried in your pillow, you reach around your nightstand blindly with the intention of remedying that particular mistake and enjoying a few more moments of peace.
Before you can make good on your plan, you make the fatal mistake of reading the message preview before silencing your phone. And suddenly, to your neverending annoyance, youâre wide awake.Â
Mom [7:36 am]: Looking forward to seeing you next Saturday at the fundraiser.Â
Mom [7:37 am]: I also noticed that you havenât indicated who youâll be bringing yet. Please fill out the RSVP form when you have a moment.Â
Mom [7:45 am]: James Sim hasnât RSVPâd yet. Are you bringing him? You should invite him if you havenât already.
Mom [7:53 am]: I also never heard the update after your date a few weeks ago. Hoping no news is good news. I just spoke with his father the other day, and it sounds like heâs doing great things over at their company.Â
Mom [8:01 am]: I also heard that he volunteered a few summers ago rebuilding turtle habitats. Wow! I think you two would get along very well.
Groaning, you flip your phone back over. That about sums up how well she knows her only daughter, you think ruefully. If she thought wooing you with turtles was a good idea, she must have forgotten that youâve had a lingering phobia of the freaky little reptiles since your friend from elementary school had a pet turtle that bit your finger when you were at her house.Â
Besides, you have serious doubts thatâs actually how James Sim spent his last summer in university.Â
If memories from your social media scrolling serve correctly, rebuilding turtle habitats was code for partying on a yacht for a month straight. You donât care how he spends his free time, but the way he already has your mother wrapped around his stupid finger is enough to annoy any lingering sleepiness out of your system.Â
Whatever. James Simâs white lies are the least of your concerns now, and they certainly wonât solve your problems. If anything, youâre starting to regret not telling your mother anything about your failed attempt at a first date with him. Now, trying to explain that disaster of an evening would only sound like an excuse at best and a flimsy lie at worst.Â
And even if she did believe you, you still have the glaring issue of next Saturday and your lack of a pre-approved plus-one.
With one final groan, you pull your blanket over your face, trying and failing to banish any thoughts of your mother, James Sim, and the certain disaster next weekend will be.Â
Despite your best efforts, your worries linger. They follow you into Sunday; they start to make you desperate on Monday. With a diminishing handful of days left until the fundraiser, your anxiety only surges.Â
By the time Wednesday rolls around, youâre so stressed out that you can barely force your eyes to focus on the nearly blank Word document in front of you, all of the legalese and case details you can usually sort through in your sleep jumbling into one incomprehensible blob.Â
Halfway through your third reread of a paragraph that details the basics of copyright law, it strikes you. The seedling of an idea so utterly ridiculous it just might be your saving grace. Â
Your mother probably, definitely, couldnât care less about James Simâs so-called affinity for wildlife rescue. No, the only thing that makes him an appropriate candidate in her eyes for this Saturday has nothing to do with his personality at all.Â
Itâs his name that she likes. His family name specifically.Â
In the middle of your favorite cafe, it hits you. The seedling of an idea sprouts roots, begins to bloom.Â
If one Sim is good enough to be your plus-one, then surely the other one would be too.Â
And you know exactly where heâll be tonight. Glancing down at the time on your phone, you force your brain to think. Now, all you need is a plan. A way to convince him. Something he canât refuse. Â
Closing the lid of your laptop, you smile. You know exactly what it is he wants.Â
Before you leave the cafe, you send a quick message to a friend. Set your plan in place so that the details are polished, irrefutable when you present it to him.
And then you set out for the university library.Â
When you find Jake and Heeseung sitting at the same exact table on the third floor of the library, Heeseung doesnât even bother to stick around for the customary greetings. Instead, he takes one single look at you before offering another flimsy excuse about having somewhere to be. Or maybe something to do. You canât remember, and it doesnât really matter.Â
After all, the only reason youâre here is becauseâ
âI have a way for you to pass econ.â Sliding into the seat next to Jake, the same one you sat in last time, you donât waste any time before divulging the reason for your presence.Â
If Jake is startled, he doesnât show it. Statistics homework forgotten on the table, the only thing you see on his face is pure, obvious relief as his shoulders relax.Â
âThank god.â Reaching for his phone, he unlocks it, tapping and swiping until heâs ready to enter a new contact. âGive me your number, and Iâllââ
You shake your head, interrupting his train of thoughts. The way you smile makes him suddenly uneasy. He thought this was over, but now heâs not so sure. You confirm his fears when you say, âA different way.â
Now Jake just looks exasperated. If you keep up this habit, heâs about to start failing statistics too. Never mind the fact that he got his hopes up for what he is sure will turn out to be a giant pile of nothing. Still, he humors you. âWhat do you mean, a different way?â
âI mean,â you start, folding your hands across your lap. Jake has the distinct impression that youâre trying your best to be as convincing as possible. If nothing else, it does pique his curiosity. Heâs never seen you be anything but annoyed or uninterested. Itâs an interesting change of pace.âI have a friend whoâs also taking econ right now and hasnât scored below a 98 on a single assignment.â Jesus, Jake thinks. Must be nice.Â
And then you drop the bomb on him. âHe said heâs more than willing to tutor you. For money, of course.â you specify, moving on so quickly he hardly has the chance to process what youâre saying. âAnd itâs not like you canât afford it, but Iâll split the cost with you. For the principle of it all.â Thereâs a beat of silence as what youâve just said settles into the air. âOh,â you add, remembering the most important detail. âAnd heâll be discreet. Under the table tutoring, if you will. No chance of word getting back to Daddy Sim.âÂ
You do your best to give him your most trustworthy smile. Jake just stares back at you, mildly horrified.
When he finally speaks again, itâs to say, â... Please, and I mean this with every single bone in my body, please never refer to my father like that again.â
Not even bothering to look sheepish, the only agreement you offer is a mock salute.Â
Your poor taste in nicknames aside, it does seem like a pretty sweet deal from where Jake is sitting. He cannot fail economics again, and getting a tutor would mean that his brother couldnât hold his success over his head, couldnât claim to be the sole reason for it. And a discreet tutor would be even better. Not going through the official university system would mean a much lower chance of his father ever finding out he got some help along the way.
All things considered, and very much to his surprise, Jake is having a hard time seeing any downsides.Â
He goes through the list again. First, he gets to pass economics. Second, he doesnât have to deal with his older brother in the process. Third, he gets a tutor that wonât pop up on his fatherâs radar, and all Jake has to do in return isâ
Wait.
âHold on a minute.â Thereâs an unmistakable edge of suspicion in Jakeâs voice. Thereâs no way you went out of your way to find him a tutor, to help pay for it, without getting something in return. The wheels in his mind are starting to spin when he asks, âWhatâs in it for you?â
Next to him, you smile. Itâs small, and if he didnât know any better, heâd think you almost look nervous. âItâs just a small favor, really.â The expression on your face is not reassuring in the slightest. Still, you insist, âItâll be easy, I promise. Just a few hours of your time at most.â
Jake knows better than to agree without details. And especially to anything youâre proposing. Heâs already preparing to kiss his dreams of passing econ goodbye when he asks slowly,âWhat is it?â
You sigh, pretenses dropping. If youâre going to convince him now, you might as well do it with honesty. âThat annual charity fundraiser event my parents throw. Your parents are usually there, I think. I donât know if youâve ever gone?â
Jake shrugs, frowning as he tries to remember. Heâs not entirely sure either. After a while, fundraisers and events and family obligations all start to blur together. Although the name does ring a bell, albeit a distant, faint one.Â
âAnyway,â you continue, âmy mother is insistent that I bring a date. Someone she considers appropriate company. You know, runs in the same circles and comes from what she would consider a good family.â Jake nods. He does know exactly what you mean. Picking up on his agreement, you add with a twinge of hopefulness, âLike I said, it would be easy. Especially for you, since youâre used to this kind of stuff. I wouldnât have to train youââ
That has Jake rolling his eyes. âLet me guess. I get a treat for rolling over?â
The ice in your glare is half hearted. âYou know what I mean. There are certainâŚâ You weigh your words carefully. âexpectations at these things.â Pausing for a moment, you add, âWhat Iâm trying to say is that I donât think youâll eat the soap, even if itâs candy shaped and on a platter.â
If you were trying to clarify your point, you did a terrible job. Jakeâs brow pulls downwards in confusion. âIs that supposed to be some kind of metaphor?â
âUnfortunately not.â You shake your head, but donât explain any further. Sunghoonâs mishaps are not the point of this conversation. A mutually beneficial deal is. Which is why you ask him, âSo, what do you say? Are you in or not?â
Is he? Jake says nothing, considering. Mentally, he goes through the list of pros and cons. Pros, he thinks. I get to finally pass econ, and I get to do it without my brother. He glances at you out of the corner of his eye, gaze tracking the movement as you nervously bite at your lower lip. Also, I get to show up at an event with the girl heâs been trying to get for weeks now.Â
Heâd be lying if that didn't spark a certain warm feeling in his chest, if it didnât inspire a sudden bout of preemptive vindication. But there are other things to consider.
Cons, he continues internally. I have to spend an entire evening at an event hosted by your family and make them believe you donât annoy the ever-loving shit out of me.
Weighing his options, Jake has one more question. âHow long would it be?â he asks, and you try to stifle a grin, as if heâs already told you yes.Â
âThe event is technically four hours,â you say carefully, âbut Iâm sure we could manage to sneak out after a solid two and a half.â
Jake nods, thinking it over a moment longer.Â
âOkay,â he finally breathes, hoping this isnât some kind of terrible, elaborate trick, that he isnât about to sign his life away on a dotted line.Â
For econ, he thinks. For whatâs left of his struggling GPA. He can manage a single night at a mind-numbingly boring high society function. Even if itâs with you. âIâm in.â
And it feels a bit strange, he has to admit, as he watches you type your contact information into his contact list. It feels odd to have your number in his phone with no intention of passing it on. To know that heâs the one who will be using it to confirm the details of this Saturday. To know that his brother will be none the wiser and not at all closer to having any kind of access to you. Â
And if that strange surge of smugness makes another sudden appearance, well, Jake just figures that no one ever has to know about it.Â
âŚ
Frowning, you give yourself another once over in the full length mirror that sits next to your vanity. A shimmering, pale gold, the evening gown that flows over your figure was hand-selected by you for this very event. For some reason, youâre having a hard time rediscovering the magic youâd felt trying it on in the showroom here in the soft, ambient light of your bedroom.Â
Objectively, youâre sure you must look good. The compliments the store attendants had given you were more than just customary, and gold has always been your color. Still, a slew of sudden uncertainties simmer in your gut. Is the slight sparkle too garish? Does the gold wash you out? Your worries feel too big for your bedroom, at too stark an opposition with the peaceful ambience as soft, instrumental music plays from your speaker.
But this particular Saturday evening has its ways of making you feel jumbled where youâd typically be steadfast. Insecure where youâd usually find confidence. Â
Itâs true that your mother has always had a critical eye, and especially where youâre concerned. If you were to search deep enough, however, youâd find that sheâs not the person youâre most concerned about making a lasting impression on tonight.Â
With no small effort, you resist the urge to smooth out invisible wrinkles in the bodice of your dress. A nervous habit more than anything, itâs only exacerbated by the way your phone is still devoid of notifications. The clock on your nightstand is a reminder that your date for the evening should be here any minute, should be sending a message as confirmation of his arrival at your apartment. But your phone is still silent, even as the hour of the fundraiser draws nearer and nearer.Â
Maybe this was a terrible mistake, you think, a new bout of uncertainties beginning to brew. It shouldn't be a surprise, really. Trust him to be just as flakey as his brother, with absolutely no regard for previous commitments or anyone elseâs time. Itâs just your luck that you get stood up again, this time by the other Sim.Â
You're in the middle of disguising your fears and distracting yourself by cursing him and his future bloodline when your phone finally pings with an incoming notification. Well, you think, grabbing your coat, feeling a bit ridiculous for the slight overreaction, youâll have to look into removing generational curses when you have the time.
For now, you settle with pulling on your heels for the evening, ignoring the way you feel a bit wobbly despite the fact that youâve walked in far worse. Locking your apartment behind you and striking a slightly unsteady pace towards the elevator down the hall, you whisper a silent plea that tonight isnât as much of a disaster as youâre afraid it could be.Â
You watch as the numbers on the elevator screen tick lower and lower, a swirling mix of dread and excitement starting to swim in your stomach. When you finally reach the first floor, youâre surprised to see a familiar face waiting for you in the lobby. Something in you softens, albeit just slightly. Youâd incorrectly assumed he would just wait for you in the comfort of his car and spent the whole ride down preparing to awkwardly check license plates in the near dark till you found the right one.Â
An overwhelming sense of self-consciousness returns to you under the brightness of the lobby lights. Unconsciously, you tuck a strand of hair behind your ear, wondering how long it will take him to notice you as you begin to walk towards him. Youâve only made it a few steps when it strikes you that heâs already distracted by something else.Â
Across the lobby, Jake Sim is engaged in a conversation with your doorman. One that looks slightly heated, by your judgment.Â
As you get closer, their words become more audible.Â
âLike I just told you,â The exasperation in your dateâs voice is apparent. âIâm here to see ___.â
And you really should make your presence known, should step in and divert the brewing argument, especially since you seem to be the subject of it.Â
But then you look at Jake. Really look at him.Â
Realistically, you knew he would come well-dressed. That had been a big part of your reason for choosing him. The Sunghoon soap fiasco aside, you already knew Jake Sim wasnât someone who needed you to put together a PowerPoint presentation on formal event dress code. He didnât need you to explain the concept of complementary colors or the advantages of getting a suit tailored. Didnât need you to explain that Converse were not an appropriate show or that no, a bolo tie is not acceptable attire.Â
Up until now, you were grateful for his pre existing knowledge. It saved you a lot of time and effort that you could use to focus on other things, like getting ready yourself. But it also meant that you were entirely unprepared to see him like this.Â
Eyes scanning him again, the immaculate fit of his suit is undeniable, as is the way his dark hair is perfectly mussed. Itâs styled enough to avoid withering comments from elderly attendees who have the habit of asking how people see with their hair covering their eyes. But itâs also messy in a way that looks intentional, in a way that makes you want to run your fingers through it, tug at it just a little, just to tease.Â
Itâs not just that heâs dressed well, though, despite the fact that he undeniably is.Â
No, what has you freezing in your footsteps is the fact that Jake looks good.Â
âAnd like I just told you, youâre not on her guest list. So Iâm sorry, sir.â There is not a single trace of apology in your doormanâs voice. âBut Iâm afraid I canât let you up. Youâll have to contact her and ask her to add you to her guest list.â Youâre not sure how he manages to do it without losing any professionality, but your doorman makes it very clear that he thinks that will happen just as soon as hell freezes over.Â
Jakeâs shoulders tense in visible frustration. You have to suppress an actual sigh at the way fabric stretches over the muscle there. âAgain, Iâm not asking you to. Could you please just let her know that Iâm here? Sheâs not answering her messagesââ
âHow odd.â The sarcasm is unmistakable.Â
Getting a little desperate, Jake ignores the slight and continues anyway. âAnd weâre on a bit of a time crunch, soââ
From here, you can see the way his features start to twist in panic. Itâs sobering enough to snap you out of your trance.
Cutting in, you make your presence known. âItâs okay,â you tell your doorman first. âI know him.â Then, you turn to Jake, putting on an award-worthy performance of false nonchalance when you explain, âSorry I didnât respond to your message. I was just on my way down.â
You watch as some of the tension drains from his features. âThatâs alright,â Jake concedes easily. âI just wanted to make sure we werenât late.â
A funny feeling, a new one, stirs again. Something in you softens. âI appreciate that.âÂ
You canât help the way you take another look at him. At his suit, his hair, his face. At him, at all of it.Â
Mistaking your gaze for scrutiny, he asks, a bit self-consciously, âWhat do you think? Will your mother approve?â
She will. Thereâs no doubt in your mind. But youâre not looking at him through her eyes when you tell him, âYeah, you look good. Really good.â
The last part probably wasnât necessary, but the way he flushes makes it almost worth it. Casting your eyes downward in an effort to hide a smile, you notice a detail that you missed earlier.Â
Jewelry. Gold jewelry. A handful of rings on his fingers and a delicate bracelet on his left wrist. Â
Suddenly, his message from last night makes a little more sense.
Jake [9:02 pm]: What color is your dress for tomorrow?
You [9:08 pm]: Gold. Donât worry about trying to match. A black suit will be just fine.Â
Now, youâre grateful he didnât fully listen to you, touched that he even bothered to ask. Â
Across from you, Jake is suddenly having a bit of a hard time breathing. The earlier near-fiasco with your doorman all but forgotten, youâre still admiring his bracelet as his eyes scan the length of you, throat bobbing by the time his gaze makes its way back up to your face.Â
âYou, uh,â he coughs. âYou look nice too.â
âThank you.â You miss the way his gaze wanders, canât seem to find a place to land that wonât dust the tops of his cheekbones an even deeper shade of crimson. âIâve been looking forward to wearing this dress forever.â
And it is a nice dress, Jake thinks, but heâs not sure how to tell you thatâs not what he meant.Â
Eyes finally landing on your feet, or rather, on the stilettos youâre wearing, he frowns. âI had to park kind of far away.â Meeting your gaze, he adds, âWhy donât you wait here? Iâll pull the car around front.â
âOkay.â Something in you melts a bit at his consideration, at the fact that he even noticed. âThank you.â
And it is nice, you think, to not be beginning the evening with your feet already sore. To have someone pick up on the little things, even if heâs being compensated for it in the form of half-price tutoring.
Sliding into the passenger seat, you try not to sigh like a lovesick schoolgirl when he opens the door for you, when he puts his hand on the back of your seat as he reverses the car out of its parking spot. Get it together, you think. Youâve turned up your nose at far more obvious attempts at wooing you, and itâs not like Jake is here with you out of his own volition. The thought is surprisingly disappointing, as he adjusts the stereo, soft music filling the silence.
The drive passes like that, in a quiet thatâs only uncomfortable if you look at it too close. Eventually, the soft melodies filtering through the stereo become a pleasant sort of background noise as you watch the world blur outside the window.Â
It would be smart, probably, to sort out your story for the evening and put together something coherent for when the two of you are inevitably asked invasive questions, but you canât bring yourself to be the one to disturb the peace.Â
So when you arrive at the fundraiser a handful of minutes later, you just have to hope that the image the two of you strike together will be enough to stave off any unwanted questions for the time being.Â
Again, Jake opens your car door for you, offers a steadying hand as you step out of it. And when he gives you his arm as you enter through the front door of the venue, you take it, wrapping your fingers around his elbow. Pausing just outside the entrance, you watch as he takes a deep breath. Â
âReady?â Youâre not sure if youâre asking him or yourself.Â
Jake answers for the both of you. âLetâs do this.â
Walking through the lobby, you hand your jackets to the coat check attendant before entering the ballroom where the fundraiser is held. Despite your general distaste for this evening and everything it entails â you sneak a glance at your partner in crime. Well, mostly everything â you canât help but admire the space around you.
Decorated immaculately down to every last element, your mother truly doesnât spare any expense or detail when it comes to throwing parties. And like always, she somehow manages to have a sharp eye on everything and everyone, no matter how chaotic or busy. Youâve hardly taken two steps inside the ballroom when she finds you, approaches you will all the grace of a panther stalking its prey.Â
Pulling you in for a quick hug, the warm greeting she gives you is more for the benefit of onlookers than for you. And it forces you to remove your hand from Jakeâs arm.
Looking over your shoulder, her voice is sickeningly saccharine. âAnd this must be James,â she beams, making eye contact with the wrong brother. Directing her attention to him, she gushes, âMy daughter has told me wonderful things about you.â
Your eyebrows raise in disbelief. Jake stifles a laugh, expertly turns it into a cough.Â
Really? You think. She did all that digging on Jamesâ so-called turtle philanthropy but never bothered to pull up a picture of the guy? And you mean, standard genetic similarities aside, itâs not like the two of them look that much alike.
âActually, mom,â you spare him the expense of having to correct her mistake, âthis is Jake Sim. Jamesâ brother. We go to school together.â
âOh,â her eyebrows fall at the slip, no doubt an unforgivable social faux pas in her mind. âYou never filled out the RSVP form, sweetie,â she somehow makes the term of endearment sound like a curse, âso I wasnât sure who youâd be bringing.â Trust her to find a way to make her mistake your fault.Â
Turning back to your date, she tries to remedy her mistake. âJake, then.â She offers him a smile so forced youâre surprised her cheeks arenât aching. Looking back at you, she fishes, âAnd heâs yourâŚ?â
Her dangling bait goes untouched. âHeâs my plus-one.â Itâs an intentional choice of words on your part. In your mind, itâs a neutral enough term that will hopefully let you navigate the evening without too many rumors or invasive questions about your personal life from people you only speak to out of reluctant obligation. Â
Jake is less used to the way your mother tends to poke and prod, the way she likes to examine the superficial details of your life with a microscope and make sure she can frame them in a way that will be pleasing for public perception. The way she doesnât ask about your love life because itâs of any genuine interest to her, but because she wants sole control of the rumor millâs production.Â
Next to you, he stiffens, feels as though heâs already failed some kind of test he didnât know he was taking, wasnât given any materials to study for.Â
Thereâs a lot to be said, probably, about the way you pick up on his discomfort so easily. The way your hand returns to the crook of his elbow wordlessly and gives a single, gentle squeeze. Reassuring him, putting his nerves at ease, as you begin to navigate your way out of this conversation.Â
âWeâd better find our seats,â you tell your mother. The only reason Jake can identify the icy edge hiding in the superficial sweetness of your voice is because heâs been on the receiving end of it. On multiple occasions. Directed at someone else, he finds it almost amusing. âWouldn't want to miss anything.â
âOf course,â your mother concedes, but thereâs an undertone there. Jake can tell that thereâs a war being waged here, battles and skirmishes in subtext and stilted pauses. Heâs no stranger to the way high society likes to wrap up insults in niceties and skirt around delicate topics, but his own family has never been anything but blunt when it comes to their distaste for him and his choices.Â
Heâs still not entirely sure what he just witnessed, but youâre dragging him by his arm to find your assigned table before he can sort through the offending slights and put on armor that may be of any use to you.Â
Carefully arranged, the maze of tables is easy enough to navigate. Each seat has a white place card in front of it, embossed with a shimmery golden script that matches your dress and holds the name of the guest whoâs been assigned to sit there.Â
You drag Jake past a flurry of names and attendees he half recognizes, stopping only to grab two flutes of champagne from a passing waiter, handing one to Jake before you continue on your mission. After another minute of searching, you find your name at a table a few rows out from the far wall. Rolling your eyes, you can practically hear your motherâs reasoning: Not too close to the wall. Wouldnât want people thinking Iâm trying to hide her. But certainly not anywhere near the center of the room, in case she falls into that pesky habit of being an awful embarrassment. Â
Standing behind your chair, your eyes find the place card stationed in front of the seat next to yours at the same time Jakeâs do.Â
âOh my god.â The exasperation is apparent, even though your words are barely audible where you mutter them under your breath.Â
Because of course this hasnât already been enough of a train wreck. Because of course the place card next to yours doesnât have Jakeâs name on it. Nope, embossed in the same shimmery gold is the name of another person entirely.Â
James Sim.Â
You turn to your date, apologetic. âGod, Iâm sorry. I really didnât fill out the RSVP form, but I didnât think sheâd just assumeâŚâ
âItâs okay.â Jake gives you some grace. âReally, it wouldnât be the first time.â And all things considered, he kind of is in his brotherâs seat tonight. Attending an event thatâs better suited for the future head of the company than his forgotten younger brother. Accompanying the girl that public opinion surely dictates would be a better match for him.Â
Still, you frown. Reaching for the small clutch that sits against your hip, you rummage for a moment before pulling out a black permanent marker.Â
Jake glances at you sideways.Your bag of the evening is tiny, barely even big enough to hold your phone. Heâs surprised you managed to fit the marker in there, much less prioritize it enough to bring it with you. âYou carry that thing around with you all the time?â
You shrug. âNever know when youâll need to do some DIY vandalism.â
It would be a lie if he said something in him doesnât soften, just a bit, when he watches you reach for the place card in front of his seat and put a giant, bold X over his brotherâs name.Â
Your handwriting is no match for the computer-generated script, but Jake still likes the place card a little better when youâre done with it, likes the way his name looks next to yours when you set it back on the table, alterations completed.Â
âThere,â you say, looking entirely too satisfied with your handiwork. âAll better.â This time, you slide down into your seat before Jake has the chance to pull it out for you. Turning to him as he tentatively takes the seat next to you, he finds a small frown on your lips. âWait,â you pause, realization written across your features. âYour brother isnât coming, right?â
Jake shakes his head. âI mean, I donât know for sure, but I doubt it. He has no reason to come. My parents are on a business trip, so they wonât be here either. And that also probably means heâs more swamped than usual at the office.â
Nodding, you take a sip of champagne. âGood.â Pausing, your lips quirk. âAlthough it would be kind of funny if heââ
âI think youâre in my seat.â The sudden interruption is flat, leaves no room for arguments.Â
Startled, the two of you spin in your chairs.Â
James Sim, despite his brotherâs predictions, is in fact not otherwise occupied at his office. Instead, he stands directly behind his younger sibling, strikes an imposing figure where his shadow blocks the chandelier light behind him and extends over his brother and his altered place card.Â
Eyes flaming, he looks at where his name has been crossed out. Replaced.Â
Next to Jake, you remain silent, figure that youâll let Jake handle this one the way he let you handle your mother. Far be it from you to step in on a family matter.
But then you notice the way Jake shrinks a little in his seat, hides a little further in his brotherâs shadow. Reaches for the place card like he wishes he could take it back.
Sliding your gaze back to your least favorite Sim sibling, your voice is even, albeit icy, when you point out the obvious, âItâs not actually. Canât you read?â Jakeâs hand stops in its tracks, falls back to his lap.
A quick look your way is the only indication James even hears you. Instead, he continues his one-sided conversation with his brother, a barely controlled sort of fury crossing over his expression. âHm,â he muses, glancing between the two of you. âSure seems like you two are awfully close.â Casting an accusatory glare at Jake, he adds, âThatâs funny. I could have sworn you said you barely knew her.â
Her. Youâre sitting right there, and you donât even get a name.Â
It doesnât go unnoticed by Jake either. And it turns out to be just what he needs to find his voice. Youâre almost proud of the sarcasm he manages to muster when he counters, âYeah, well, this funny thing happens when you spend time together. You actually get to know each other.â Straightening his spine, thereâs an unmistakable edge in his voice when he adds, âYou know, when you actually bother to show up, that is.â
You hide a laugh behind your hand, albeit not very well. Glancing at Jake, a feeling swells in your chest that you can only identify as pride. You didnât know he had it in him.Â
Reassessing his strategy, James turns to you, forcing a nonchalance that is entirely contradicted by the way his cheeks are rapidly reddening. âActually, ___,â he tries, acting as if the last thirty seconds faded out of existence at his will. âI was hoping to speak to you about something. Iâd love to get you a drink if youââ
âActually,â Jake cuts in, doubling down. âWe already have drinks.â Behind you on the table, the two near full glasses of champagne are undeniable evidence. The laugh that spills out of you this time is impossible to hide. Yeah, you decide, between the two of them, you definitely hate James more. Entirely amused, the only thing you wish you had is a bowl of popcorn as you root for the underdog. Not that he needs it. Much to your satisfaction, heâs been landing his punches well.Â
The giggle dies on your lips, though, when you feel the warmth of another hand suddenly cover the top of yours where it rests on your thigh. Gaze flaming, James follows the movement. Startled, your eyes fly to Jake. The only view youâre offered is of his profile as he keeps his gaze trained on his brother, the challenge in his features unmistakable.Â
The only consolation he offers for your sudden shock is a small, reassuring squeeze against your knuckles.Â
And then he says, âAnd Iâd like to keep my girlfriend right here, actually.â At that, he does finally turn to you, eyes pleading, gaze imploring when he seeks your permission. Even though theyâre performative in nature, his words arenât solely for Jamesâ benefit. âIf thatâs alright with you, that is.â
Girlfriend.
You were perfectly happy in the role of the observer, but now Jake has dragged you into the spotlight. Even though it pains you, you know you canât leave him hanging. Not when that would mean a sure victory for his dickhead of a brother.Â
Girlfriend. The word echoes in your head, has you feeling dizzy.
âOf course,â you return hollowly, barely recognizing the sound of your own voice over the sudden rushing in your ears. âBoyfriend.â
When you smile at him, you make sure it looks sickeningly sweet enough to deter James. Your eyes, however, flash with a warning only Jake can read.Â
âYouâre dating?â James canât hide his shock, and his outrage is just as obvious.Â
âYep,â Jake passes you a panicked look. But you donât need it, donât need his convincing. Youâve already dug yourself a deep enough hole. Trying to climb out now would only mean everything crumbles.Â
âSure are,â you confirm with a tight smile. Turning back to Jake, you add, âActually, sweetie, I need to talk to you about, uhâŚâ you scramble for a moment. Finish vaguely with, âthat thing.âÂ
âRight.â Jake picks up on the threat in your eyes seamlessly, knows thereâs only one acceptable response. âThat thing,â he echoes.Â
âYeah, so,â you turn back to James, barely acknowledging him as you start to stand. âWeâre gonna step out for a minute.â
Jake is all but putty in your hands as you switch the positioning of your grip so that the hand that was resting on yours is now encased firmly between your fingers.Â
âSee you later,â are Jakeâs breathless parting words to his brother.Â
âHopefully not, though,â you alter.Â
And then youâre dragging him back through the crowd towards the exit, and itâs all Jake can do to not run into the other guests or knock over the delicately balanced trays of hors dâoeuvres waiters carry throughout the room. Heâs at your mercy all the way through the double doors of the ballroom, and you pause only briefly to determine which hallway is less likely to have people in it before deciding on the one to the right, towing him along behind you.
Once youâre far enough away from unwanted eyes and ears, you start wiggling every door knob you come across, growing visibly more frustrated until you finally find an unlocked one. Huffing, you push Jake into the spare storage closet first. Following him in, you close the door behind you.Â
The sudden change in space puts you in close proximity. Your nose is only a handful of inches away from his when you start laying out accusations.Â
âWhat the hell?â With the same hand than just dragged him on a half marathon, you shove at his chest. âBoyfriend?â You have half a mind to grab the broom standing next to you and start whacking him with it.Â
âIâm sorry!â Jake holds his hands up defensively. He doesnât miss the way youâre eyeing every cleaning tool around you, no doubt deciding which would make the most effective weapon. âI panicked, okay? I just hate that smug little look he gets on his faceââ
âWell youâre about to be seeing âthat smug little lookâ a lot more once he calls your bluff!â you half-shout, trying to convey your anger without alerting anyone to your presence.âThe timeline barely lines up to begin with. Itâs only been what, a few weeks since I was supposed to go on a date with him? And thatâs not to mention the fact that there wonât be anyone to corroborate our story, because we donât spend any time together, since, yâknow, weâre not dating.â
Jake begs to differ. Youâve invaded more than one of his Wednesday night statistics study sessions.Â
But before he can point this out, youâre continuing. âWhich means youâre gonna have to come up with some sort of believable explanation for why we break up after, like, three days.â
âUgh.â Jake drags an open palm down his face. He hates to admit it, but you do have a point there.Â
Fingers running through his hair, his sudden stress is apparent. And youâre not trying to send him to an early grave, but would it have killed him to think before he spoke? Consider the consequences of starting the exact kind of rumor youâve been hoping to dodge all evening? You get that his brother is not exactly an easy person to get along with, but was the short-lived victory really worth the potential fallout?Â
Across from you, Jake seems to be having the same realizations. A million thoughts whirring through his brain, heâs not sure where to place his focus.Â
After a moment, he settles on optimism. âLook, I think it will be fine.â The more he thinks about it, the more he convinces himself he believes it. âJames has been up to his ass in company stuff since the second he graduated, so itâs not like he has extra time to check up on us or anything.â And even if he did, James would have no way of knowing who to ask. Jake has the sneaking suspicion his older brother couldnât name a single one of his friends if his life depended on it. He would have no idea who to track down to corroborate your so-called romance.Â
âWe wonât have to do anything,â Jake reasons. âIâll just mention you in passing for the next few weeks if he happens to ask.â Even that should be simple enough. After all, Jake seriously doubts he will. âAnd by the time the holidays roll around, I can just say things fizzled naturally.â Easy. Simple. Uncomplicated. Mutual, and your pride and his both remain intact. âNo big deal.âÂ
Across from him, you weigh his words. It makes sense, yes, but thereâs something starting to swirl in your gut that you donât like. It feels a little too much like dread, like trepidation. Jake can read all of the uncertainty written across your face when you tell him, âI still donât like it. My mother and your brother were both here tonight and already got different stories from us. This could get messy really quickly. I mean, what if our families start talkingââ
âThey wonât.â Jake shakes his head. âYour mom thinks Iâm just a plus-one, and when my name comes up in James and my fatherâs conversations, it isnât to discuss the ins and outs of my dating life.â Of this, at least, Jake is sure. His father couldnât care less who he dates, as long as itâs not a liability to him, to the company. âBesides, we're university students.â Jake tries to lighten the mood, clear some of the tension. âTwenty-one and immature and all that.â For a moment, Jake imagines what life would feel like if thatâs truly all he was, if thatâs the only thing he got to be. No added pressure of a notorious last name and a reputation to maintain. Tucking that thought to the back of his mind, he decides heâll mourn it later. âA short-lived relationship with a story that doesnât quite add up is practically a right of passage. Not something to be suspicious of.âÂ
You remain silent for a moment, but your hand doesnât get any closer to the broom.
âOkay.â Some of the tension seeps out of your shoulders as you turn his reasoning over in your brain, nodding as his logic starts to piece together. âOkay,â you reiterate. You still donât like it, but heâs right about one thing: it is the best option you have.Â
After all, thereâs no way in hell youâre about to go tell your mother that your plus-one is actually your secret boyfriend, and you hate to admit it, but Jamesâ little smirk is incredibly agitating. And it will all blow over, youâre sure. Like Jake said, James and your mother have no real reason to talk, and if Jake is convinced that his brother wonât be spreading this particular rumor, youâll just have to believe him for the time being.Â
Letting him out of the closet first, you only imitate hitting him upside the back of the head once before you catch up to him, linking arms again before reentering the ballroom.Â
As the evening goes on, your worry starts to subside. Thankfully, every other part of the night goes perfectly to plan, even if you do have to force yourself to laugh a little too hard at one of Jakeâs awful jokes when you catch James watching the two of you. The second glass of champagne you down helps, if nothing else.Â
Exactly as you predicted, after two and a half hours have passed, you and Jake are sneaking out the back exit, tiptoeing to his car as the fourth speaker of the evening continues their droning speech inside the event. Your mother is none the wiser to your early departure, and you hope itâs the first in a series of victories for the evening.Â
When Jake drops you off just outside the front doors of your apartment building, his smile is almost reassuring enough to put that lingering sense of unease to rest where it still sits in your gut.Â
Makeup removed, hair washed, and evening gown traded for pajamas, sleep is slow to find you a handful of hours later. Eventually, though, it does, and your rest is undisturbed, dreamless.Â
âŚ
The next morning, with nothing but the pastel tones of sunrise and the sound of his brewing coffee maker to keep him company, Jake Sim stares at the message on his phone in abject horror.Â
Mom [7:32 am]: I canât believe I had to find out from your brother! Family dinner next weekend at our place. Bring your girlfriend. :)Â
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ
CONTINUED IN PART 2
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ
note: thank you for reading! I hope you enjoyed. part two still needs some love, and I'm hoping to have it out around this same time next week. I'll announce for sure when I have a release date & time. as always, I love hearing any thoughts/comments/screaming you may have. happy reading!