HMN C50
by berryChapter 50
âAh⊠itâs sweet and nice.â
Daeyoung murmured dreamily, nose hovering close to the rim of the mug, inhaling the gentle citrus scent. The warmth spreading from the ceramic into his hands was meltingly pleasant.
ââŠâŠâ
Across from him, Go Chiwoo didnât even touch his cup. Instead, he was staringâexpression somewhere between annoyance and disbelief.
Ha. At this point, Daeyoung could practically read his moods just from his face. Whatever the reason, theyâd spent enough time togetherâtalking, meeting, drinking teaâto admit that some invisible wall between them had thinned.
âWhat now?â
âI just donât get it. How someone who apparently has their own personal knight in shining armor still ends up drinking grapefruit tea on my dime.â
âWow. Seriously. Thatâs so petty and so childish.â
Daeyoung let out a short laugh, responding halfheartedly, but Chiwooâs frown didnât budge. Wait⊠was he actually serious?
When Daeyoung looked closer, Chiwooâs lips were drawn tight, his eyes faintly sulking as he lifted his mug. His posture, normally upright and proper, had tilted slightly; one leg crossed over the other, head cocked in faint irritation. Daeyoung sighed.
âWonjungâs just that kind of guy. He looks out for people. And I donât have my wallet right now. I always lose it when I drink, so whenever we go out, Wonjung holds onto it for me.â
Even as he explained, he realized he had no idea why he was bothering. He didnât even know what part of this was making Chiwoo look so displeasedâor why, as he kept talking, the manâs expression only darkened further.
âWhyâd you give it to him?â
ââŠHuh?â
Chiwoo leaned forward, arms braced against the table, his voice suddenly sharp. The faint pout from before vanished, replaced with open irritation.
âDo you not understand how important it is to trust someone with your money? Youâre saying you handed over the cash you broke your wrist working for? Whatâare your pockets so fucking shredded you need him to hold it for you?â
ââŠâŠâ
For a second, Daeyoung blinked at him, dumbfounded. The atmosphere was so absurdly tense he almost wondered if heâd been caught cheating or something. His alcohol-fogged mind couldnât decide between laughing or getting angry.
âSee? Look at yourself. You walk out like this without your wallet, nothing but your own two hands. Why put yourself in that situation? Even if I try to understandââ
âWhat⊠you want to hold onto it instead?â
Chiwoo froze. Then exhaled, quiet but deliberate.
âYeah. Thatâs better.â
And just like that, he stopped ranting. The long speech about âtrustâ and âresponsibilityâ evaporated instantly, leaving behind only a self-satisfied calm.
Daeyoung could only laugh under his breath. Maybe it was the lingering buzz from alcohol, but the way Chiwooâs face lit up with unfiltered emotion⊠was kind of cute. Which was insane. Completely insane.
He stirred his tea lazily with the tiny spoon, watching the pale gold liquid swirl. The taste was especially sweet tonight.
âOh, right. Iâm heading down to my parentsâ place tomorrow. Gonna pick up my bag while Iâm there.â
More precisely, the pendant inside the bag was what mattered.
âTomorrow? What time?â
âI booked the ten oâclock bus. Iâll be back Sunday night.â
Chiwoo nodded once, understanding.
Once he returned that pendant to where it belonged, thereâd be no reason to sit here, drinking tea side by side like this. That was the truth of it. Thisâwhatever it wasâwasnât normal.
He exhaled softly, staring at nothing in particular before taking another sip.
âHey. Youâre Ahn Daeyoung, right?â
A hand tapped his shoulder.
The hot rim nearly burned his lips as he startled, jerking upright.
Gray and blue-dyed hair. Oversized designer tee. Tattoos running down his bare arms even though it wasnât remotely warm enough for short sleeves.
ââŠâŠâ
âHey, you donât remember me? Choi Gi-hyeop.â
ââŠAh.â
âAh, fuck, you do remember. I was about to get offended.â
Of course he remembered.
Choi Gi-hyeop was the first person heâd befriended when heâd entered high school at seventeen.
âDamn, you got into some fancy college and changed your number, huh? I was talking about you the other day with the guysâwe were wondering how you were.â
Daeyoung swallowed dryly. His smile was thin, brittle. The hand holding his mug trembled faintly, tightening around the handle.
Across the table, Chiwooâs gaze flicked from Daeyoungâs fingers, to his shoulder, to the tense line of his neck.
âUh⊠yeah, wellââ
âCâmon, gimme your number.â
The relaxed warmth that had filled his body a minute ago drained away all at once.
For a second, he just stared blankly at Gi-hyeopâs shoulder, mind blank, before reaching into his pocket without a word.
Tap. Tap.
A sharp sound against the tableâChiwooâs index finger.
âCanât tell if youâre the type who doesnât realize heâs interrupting a serious conversation, or the type who doesnât care.â
The voice came from across the table, low and cutting. Gi-hyeop turned, brows knitting.
ââŠWhat? You know him?â
âDo you know me? You didnât, and you still butted in.â
The words werenât loud, but the disdain was unmistakable.
Gi-hyeopâs frown deepened, his expression hardeningâbut Chiwooâs stayed perfectly composed.
âThough honestly, I donât really want to know someone who looks like that.â
He said it almost lazily, tilting his head just enough to take in the manâs appearance.
âLook at this mess,â he muttered, just loud enough to sting.
Gi-hyeop bristled immediately. âYou littleââ
Heâd been about to fire backââAnd what about your face, you pretty-boy bastard?ââbut the insult caught in his throat.
Because the face across from him was⊠flawless. Too perfect to ridicule.
So he pivoted, ready to brag about his expensive clothes, maybe throw in something crass about moneyâbut then his eyes caught the manâs watch.
No brand logo. No loud labels. Just quiet, expensive minimalism. The clean shirt, the posture, the sheer size of his frameâevery inch of him screamed league above.
âYouâfuckingââ
âIf youâre out of words, walk away. And donât go looking for a fight you canât win.â
The dismissal was effortlessâa flick of his wrist, like brushing off a fly.
Gi-hyeopâs pride wouldnât let him leave silently. His face flushed with rage as he turned back toward Daeyoung, lips curling.
âSo what, Daeyoungâgot yourself another husband this time? See you around.â
He grabbed his drink from the counter and stalked out.
ââŠâŠâ
Daeyoung stared at the table, lips pressed tight.
Thump. Thump.
His pulse pounded behind his ears. The café music that had seemed pleasant moments ago now vanished into static.
Again. Heâd been seen at his weakestâagain. By Go Chiwoo, of all people.
High school had never been kind to him.
On the surface, it looked ordinaryâboys playing soccer, laughing crudely, swapping jokes about girlsâbut under it was hierarchy. The strong ruled, the weak got cornered. His school, at least, had been that way.
And so, in college, heâd wanted to fit in. To blend. To be liked. Every little rumor, every embarrassment hit him harder than it should haveâbecause heâd lived through worse.
Falling down or getting dumped in public didnât matter. What truly humiliated him was being reminded of that pastâthe boy in the school uniform who couldnât speak up, who got laughed at and stepped on.
Chiwoo must have known.
He had to.
Someone like himâsomeone raised high above, someone whoâd probably always looked down on othersâwould recognize condescension when he saw it. Which was why heâd met it with equal disdain and thrown Gi-hyeop out.
Shame and gratitude clashed violently inside him.
Being seen like thatâstaring dumbly, frozen, unable to say noâfelt like being stripped bare.
Scrape.
The chair slid back.
Chiwoo stood, disappeared briefly, then returned with a pack of wet tissues. He peeled one open with a crisp sound, took Daeyoungâs mug from his stiff grip, and wiped away the tea that had spilled over the edge. The circular stains on the table vanished beneath his steady hand.
Then, as if nothing had happened, he lifted the mug to his lips and drank.
Sip.
The soft sound of swallowing broke the silence.
ââŠJust a high school classmate,â Daeyoung said finally.
He knew how pointless it soundedâtoo late, too flimsyâbut it was all he had. Pretending to be fine was the best he could manage.
âSame age, right? His face looks like someone chewed it up and spat it out.â
ââŠAh.â
The dry remark caught him off guard, and before he knew it, Daeyoung was laughing. When he lifted his gaze, Chiwoo was expressionless again, sipping his tea like he hadnât just said something that brutal.
âYeah. Heâs kind of a mess.â
Daeyoung nodded faintly. The tension in his shoulders eased. One short, scathing commentâstrangely, it helped.
He let out a long breath, thumb absently rubbing the side of his mug. Chiwoo didnât ask anything more. He just sat there, quietly keeping him company.
Bzzz.
âOhâWonjungâs calling. Probably wondering where we went. Letâs go.â
By the time they stood to leave, Daeyoung actually felt better.
Even after running into the person whoâd shattered his most fragile memories of youthâheâd recovered faster than heâd thought possible.
Because of an unexpected person.
Maybe it was Chiwooâs indifference that helped. Or maybe⊠next week, if Chiwoo went back to teasing him like always, heâd actually feel a little disappointed.
That thought lingered as they returned to the bar.
Wonjung met them halfway, grabbing his arm and demanding to know where theyâd disappeared to. Daeyoung glanced back. Chiwoo had already rejoined Minhye, chatting easily.
He let himself be pulled to a different table. The distance between them grew again, but his eyes still wandered back every so often.
There were new thingsâsmall thingsâto be grateful to Chiwoo for. And with them, something else had shifted.
The sharp edges between them, once jagged and defensive, had dulled slightlyârounded into something almost warm.
Chiwoo was still infuriating, still impossible to read.
But for the first time, being near him didnât feel unpleasant.
And that, more than anything, was strange.