Very well written đ«¶
... is well known in Penacony as one of the elite gamblers. AVENTURINE doesn't take a simple bet and runs with it, but makes it clear that if you ever play a game against him, he'll take it up to 10 notches.
... is called the 'compulsive gambler of Penacony', where students shiver at the mention of his name. Often, whoever gambles with him is met with a terrible end, citing that being near him is akin to a death wish with how possessed he acts.
... only desires a challenge. He dislikes gambling for the sake of money or powerâ he has enough and wants to spend it all until the day he dies. All he wants is the thrill, the one that would push him to the edge, constantly seeking for more.
... is an adrenaline junkie and makes those who goes against him rot in debt, becoming housepets in his journey of finding the one, but he had no luck. A shame, as he's a skilled gambler with many tricks and lady luck constantly gazing on his shoulderâ until he met you.
... found you intriguing when you played a game of Craps, and although the stakes were rigged and against you, a newbie, you swept the floor with them and exposed them for their crimes. AVENTURINE found it more amusing when you stated, plain as day, "Those house pets of yours are going to need their lives back when they realize it's been rigged from day one."
... asked the other elites and even the president himself, SUNDAY, if he's ever heard of you. To his surprise, it was like no one has, and SUNDAY comments that AVENTURINE may be up to someone that doesn't exist anywhere. Not in the records, outside, or even the entirety of the country.
... began to become the regular of your regulars; who saw you in your games with others. He saw you win on them, exposing how they have seamlessly won those games despite it being against your favor, and turning it on their heads.
..., after studying your behavior and mannerisms, approached you for a little gamble. It isn't much, as all he wants is simply see what makes you tick.
... leads you into his office and you both take your seats, two sets of cards set in front of you. He even told you that the game you two will be playing is Blackjackâ a staple of Penacony, he jokes, but you two know it's a lie.
... tells you that if you win, he'll let you in to the Elites and convince SUNDAY to stop pursuing your missing records. Everyone has been itching to get you to fall from grace, and he isn't letting them get their grimy hands onto your pretty face. Not if he has a say in it. However...
... tells you that if he wins, he'll have you as his personal housepet: a trophy to signify that you have fallen for a man that's feared by many.
... watches with a smile as the cards were taken from both sides, eagerly awaiting for the final verdict between you.
... knew it was only one round. Who knew he only has one chance to finally claim what is his.
... chuckles when he sees the results, his eyes gleaming with the sense of prideâ to his loss or yours, no one shall ever know.
@.yxstxrdrxxm | do not republish or repost my works anywhere | 2024
TWO OF THEM.
The place weâve been living in is kicking us out on a short notice of 3 days (they previously gave us a month and now they suddenly changed their minds, and thereâs nothing we can do because weâre just ukrainian refugees at their mercy) so Iâll be taking emergency commissions so we can pay for the lease/rent !!
If youâre interested, DM me or email me at portalmonsterrr@gmail.com
Thanks! ( ÂŽâąÌ„̄̄ÏâąÌ„̄̄` )
Today, Jordan airdropped food for Gaza. Most of it landed in the sea as fisherman went by boat to grab the bags. The food was sealed and everything was packed tightly for the possibility of it dropping in the sea so the food was edible but this is not enough. 4 planes for 2.1 million people is not enough. We need a ceasefire now and for the thousands of trucks that are blocked at the border to enter before this catastrophe continues to take lives.
Identified martyrs of the May 26th, Rafah massacre
Not just numbers
America invaded half the globe for the sake of freedom
i get so sad whenever i see a good fanfic writer deactivate omg </3 second one iâve been sad to see go
honestly i do feel like with certain people deactivating, writing has been harder for me bc i liked to enjoy reading fics while i was actively putting out fics weekly. but now whenever i skim the genshin angst tag or anything like that nothing recent interests me nd then iâm even less inspired to write. it just feels like overall tumblr has been lacking a lot lately but maybe iâm missing out on the good stuff that doesnât pop up on my feed
they were her people
sunday with a singer! darling, one who had escaped from him almost seven years ago, and disappeared off the face of the galaxy. imagine his reaction when he gets word of a famous belobogian band on the radio soon after itâs connections to the IPC were restored, comprised of a woman named serval landau, and a *very* familiar young woman, with an even more familiar voice.
- (âŠcould i be âš anon?)
Yandere!Sunday x Reader
cw(s) : yandere, written before 2.2
wc : 2.6k
You have the power of democracy by your side âš anon and I have no choice but to adhere to public demand :] Even though you mentioned a female!reader, the direction of the narrative didn't necessitate that specification, so the reader is gender-neutral! But they have been called âbabygirlâ once.
âHow can the bird that is born for joy
Sit in a cage and sing?â
â William Blake
You've avoided all shades of white and blue since the dawn of this day.
Serval regarded your pertinacity with a voiceless breadth of intrigue, before yielding with little to no resistance. A smidgen of guilt had briefly permeated your consciousness upon the vague shadow of a pout on her face, you recalled her enthusiasm passed through plans of matching outfits on your debutante from days now labeled as the near past. She picked herself up quickly though, her free-spirited ideals would not be compromised by some mere color choice.
It was difficult to not admire her. Lamentably, it is much easier to cradle the preachings of an unrestrained life than to actually act upon them â and by doing so, shouldering the frigid reality that came with such a life. As a child of frozen terrains although, frigidity must be Serval's playground, you eventually conclude. That is hardly the case for you, but you'd rather swallow whole chunks of ice than pin the blame on yourself alone for that apparent incapability.
You aren't at fault for your paranoia in embracing freedom, but you are resolved enough to try breaking away from its clutches. But just as tattoos sink deep beneath skin, that anxiety stubbornly clings to your psyche and the memories of the past nurture and allow it to fester. Which is why, you must avoid any shades of white and blue, at least until the dawn of tomorrow graces Belobog. Be it a superstition with no rational ground or scientific explanation, you decide to believe firmly in your gut.
The walls of the makeshift back-room muffle the chorus of the crowd outside, but it is enough to comfort you that your long held wish did come true. The single light bulb hanging beyond the door of the room serves as the sole source of luminescence, although it is barely helpful, the light bounces off from your back and reflects a scarcely tangible silhouette in the mirror of the dressing table. Glitters of dust floating around are illuminated by that light, abandoned furniture peek beneath their veils from your peripheral â they exclaim what this room's previous purpose had been.
Neither the modest setting nor the small trinkets spread across the dressing table come close to what you had a taste of ; glimmering surfaces, brands of beauty products worth a man's life savings and silks of no contender would mock this shack, if they could. But your heart soaks in solace whenever that irritatingly bright light flickers and mellowed cheers of the crowd permeate the room's thin walls, not because you lack taste in life, but because you recognize the futility of vanity.
âYou did amazing there, babygirl!â
Your vision stutters at the impact of firm touch, you feel arms rest atop your decolletage, a shadow cloaks your reflection in the mirror. The cool touch of metal upon your left shoulder and a distinct streak of blue masquerading among blond locks of hair draw out a breath of relief from your lungs. But a faint twist engulfs your gut the very next second, you recall asking for a moment of quietude vividly.
âI don't think my performance was as great as you say, Serval. And whatever I achieved, it wouldn't have been possible without you guys.â your fingers twiddle with your sleeves, your eyes find interest in an abandoned nail polish.
You peek up in time to meet the rockstar's stare through the mirror, with some wrestling with the light, her disapproval shines through to your eyes.
âNonsense, you were the star of today's show. Give yourself some credit, would ya?â your cheek soaks in the pinch before your brain can decode her words, you muffle a whine in protest.
âOkay, okay! I'm sorry.â your hand quickly soothes over the tempered skin when her fingers retreat, that's the extent of âretaliationâ you offer Serval, having accustomed yourself to her spontaneity in the interim of your stay under her care.
âI saw you look... pretty unnerved after the performance, so I came to check.â you scratch your cheek, eyes darting upwards to find her face shielded by your hair. You cannot pinpoint why, but for a second it seemed like she struggled to find footing with her phrasing of words. You've never heard her falter, at least in speech, but the waves of conversation swallow that momentary observation just as quickly.
Instead of being candid, you take a different turn, âYou know, I wasn't lying about being grateful to you all. To perform on a stage without any rules was a long held dream of mine,â you feel gooseflesh bloom across your arms as tip-toeing touch descends to your sides, something within tempts you to curl in on yourself but you force your breath to finish. âIf it hadn't been for your help, I would never succeed in fulfilling it.â
Serval hums in understanding, the timbres of it traverses from your skull and extends to your nerves. Her arms rest snuggly around your waist and you swallow dryly. Serval always wrapped her arms around your shoulders whenever she felt the need to and the fact that it made your head nearly spiral with questions didn't require to be stated. Only now do you reckon the slumbering atmosphere, without the jeer and cheer of the audience, you felt Belobog's cold biting into the tips of your fingers. You told everyone to not disturb you â your mind echoes without clarification.
âIs it because of that husband of yours?â
Your shoulders tense and for a litany of reasons, most obscure enough to be dismissed as misnomers produced by your instincts, none but one potent enough to be addressed. âWell yes⊠I told you about a man, but I don't remember specifying that it was a âhusbandâ responsible for my situation.â
Your words materialize as half confused and half laden with caution, you'd told Serval a few things about your predicament â nothing groundbreakingly detailed, just enough to earn a portion of her empathy. It kills you to follow tactics that enticed you to your doom, but what is life, if not a series of trial and error? It's best to apply the teachings of a manipulator than to continue being manipulated for eternity. But of course, you'll admit, such carefully taken steps still don't lessen the likelihood of meeting a dead-end to zero. How unfortunate.
It's Serval's turn to tense, but it's so quick you're left questioning whether it really happened. âAh, but there was a ring on your right ring finger when you first came here! And the âmanâ in your stories didn't seem to be different persons. So, I took a guessâŠâ
An awkward chuckle leaves the rockstar's lips and you blink. She's right, you were still wearing your wedding ring when you came here ; an amateur mistake, you should've left it at some abstruse corner of the Dewlight Pavilion. You glance up at your reflections on the mirror, Serval was now mimicking your previous antics, a painted nail against her cheek albeit, the opposing light veiled her expression from recognition. One of her arms was still around your waist, loosely this time.
âI didn't say anything offending, did I?â the mechanic mutters tentatively. You take a deep breath and exhale, vacillating between the multitude of scenarios conjured by your lingering paranoia. But if it's Serval, you give it more thought, there was no tangible reason as to why she of all people would bring this up with malicious intent â or at least, none that you could come up with. She was likely merely concerned for your well-being, a big sister's instincts perhaps.
âNot at all,â the three words are uttered with more difficulty than needed but the effort is proved worth it when she relaxes and returns to embrace you with gusto.
This time you can feel her touch vividly across the bare skin of your midriff, a reminder of your present dress up automatically causes blood to rush to your face. The matching crop-top with Serval was hardly the most revealing thing someone had worn in this universe, but it was the boldest you'd been with your attire. You think you saw her gaze tilting at the sight but the only way to affirm it would make things further awkward. As you melt upon recalling that you'd sung your lungs out with this on in front of a crowd, the rockstar chimes in again.
âAh right, I almost forgot why I actually came here. I have a gift for you!â you blink out of your stupor to hear shuffles, a bottle of hairspray is knocked to the ground due to her movements. The object clamors down and rolls a few feet away but Serval pays it no attention, you quirk a brow at her sudden briskness. âClose your eyes.â she lulls sweetly, you obey despite your state of disorientation.
You feel the faint brushes of her fingers first, then a noticeable weight around your neck, fastened a little too tightly. After she beckons you to open your eyes, you scrutinize the object through your reflection on the mirror and recognize it to be⊠a choker. It's heavier than what you recall chokers to be, its body is painted in baby blue and when you turn your head the light bounces off its surface to reveal golden outlinings. Three small wings curl around the white tassel hanging from the middle, you find the wings to be unnervingly soft when your fingers brush across them.
The choker looked expensive, despite its somewhat gaudy appearance and it didn't seem like something aligning with Serval's tastes. But most importantly, there's blue and white in it â the two colors you'd been stubbornly avoiding. Your mind spirals, you clearly remember telling Serval that you didn't want to see those two colors today â or, did you? Perhaps it was your mind weaving its own narratives in the flurry of adrenaline? A chill rears its grotesque head, a panic you can't quite push down despite your mind adapting to give her the benefit of the doubt, your breaths lapse unevenly.
âFor being such a darling member of Mechanical Fever, a token of our friendship. I didn't know how else to thank you, so I got this instead.â Serval's voice yanks you from the edge of a panic attack, you force yourself to breathe deeply. You turn around when you notice the absence of her shadow, finding her retreating into the shadow of the half ajar door.
You remain seated on the juncture between light and shadow, returning to face the mirror after the rockstar settles on a stool. âI should be the one saying that and⊠you didn't have to give me this, but I appreciate the gesture nonetheless.â your thumb and index fingers twiddle with the pure white tassel.
Her words seem to make you forget about your earlier paranoia, nostalgia cascades down your soul as you recall the fond memories inherent to Belobog. Destiny's game is truly difficult to comprehend, to think you'd find an actual home so far from your supposed one.
You add without waiting for her reply, âWhen I first came here, I was so scared and paranoid. I couldn't sleep the first night and I wanted nothing more than to flee the next morning. I really mean it when I say I couldn't make it without your and the others' help.â
Your palm cradles the beat of your existence, the thin fabric of the crop top does little to muffle your heart's clamorous prance.
âThank you, thank you so much for everything.â your pour as much gratitude from the river coursing through the recesses of your soul in those words. Your chest constricts as you sigh, you remember all the faces that are now known as familiar and random instances buried deep in your memories. Perhaps it's the naturally cold weather of this planet that plays a part, but you furrow your brows as inexplicable sorrow engulfs your heart.
âI, too, hope that you've had a wonderful experience on this planet.â
A much younger you used to judge the victims of stories for choosing to freeze than to flee in the face of candid danger, vowing to not follow in their footsteps should you meet such a predicament one day. Your heart would shatter to incorrigible bits if it hadn't been so viciously twisted, you realize how futile promises are at the thin line separating life and death.
Your body flinches from its hunched position to meet watchful golden eyes, shielded by the door's shadow. You blink a multitude of times, as if that'd make his poised presence disappear, as if that'd affirm that you were simply in the grips of anxiety and Serval would return to reprimand you back to reality.
The warmth drains from your body when he's still there, sitting in front of you with a mocking serenity â you've never hated the vice grip he maintains on his composure more than this moment. Why, how, when and what conjoins his name to frame a myriad of questions, each being answered by none other than you the very next second. Your ears twitch when you catch voices at the end of the hallway, the actual Serval and others must be retreating. You might be a deer inches away from the tiger's jaw, but you'll not go down without a fight, at least.
âIf you're planning to scream, I'd advise against that.â Sunday calmly states, your breath catches in your throat. âThe choker on your neck has a shock mechanism and it can be activated in various ways. Namely, any time you raise your voice above the coded decibels and the voltage will increase the louder you scream.â
Your hand flies upwards towards the cursed choker and you wrestle a breath in disbelief, you were made a fool of and quite exquisitely. You realize you should've listened to your gut instincts when you still had the choice. Sunday raises a gloved palm when you restlessly tug at the thing, âDonât bother, it can only be taken off with a password.â
A password only he knows, you conclude. It was not news to you that his sanity is loose from the hinges of his soul, but never would you have expected him to go this far. You glare at your husband, though it looks more like a gazelle's helpless stare as it struggles in the jaws of a predator. The voices from the hallway disappear entirely, you'd told them not to look for you so they'll not return, you feel your eyes moisten as you realize you're stuck alone with Sunday.
âWhyââ you choke.
âI understand that you must have a lot of questions,â his words are half resignation and half cheap empathy. âBut it is not your turn to speak, for there are more pressing matters at hand.â
Sunday stands up, brows scrunching at the dust floating around the room. âThe matter of your possible unfaithfulness is one thing,â his hand grips the handle of the door and you flinch. âBut performing in front of so many people without any consideration of how far it'll spread, or choice of attire,â your body erupts in shudders upon feeling his pointed stare, the expanse of your exposure finally registering.
âTruly unbefitting of my spouse.â
But it's not his judging gaze that has your nerves frayed, it's the hints of genuine disappointment that borders on anger leaking through his words that makes you feel parched, makes you want the earth split in half and take you from this situation. Your experience with Sunday has taught you that he has the patience of a saint, but none of those memories reassure you that it's boundless. You realize that you've never actually seen his face contorted in ire, no matter how defiant you'd been. Aeons, you wish it stayed that way forever.
As the shadow of the closing door engulfs your form and leaves the rest to interpretation, the last thing you see are his darkened golden eyes â you're certain that, that was the instance the last spirited part of you died.
rest in peace i guess
summary: years after your messy breakup that broke up the band, you and mydei are forced back together for a reunion tourâand the public canât get enough of your chemistry. on stage, youâre electric, but backstage itâs all snide comments, heated arguments, and mydei slipping in petty lyric changes just to piss you off. youâre not sure whatâs worse: how much you still hate him or how much you donât.
âą pairing: lead guitarist!mydei x lead singer!fem!reader âą contains: romance, angst, smut (oral sex, hate sex, angry sex, unprotected sex, wall sex, overstimulation, slight dirty talk), exes to lovers au, modern au, band au, profanity, alcohol consumption, slight toxicity from both parties, smoking, an amphoreus ensemble castâplease let me know if iâve missed anything! âą word count: 16.7k âą note: inspired by the honkai star rail official mydei art, olivia rodrigoâs get him back! & daisy jones and the six by taylor jenkins reid. read on ao3 here.
i). wait, is this the song with the drums?
Your first instinct, when Anaxa drops the news about the reunion tour, is to shake your head and vehemently say no.
âAbsolutely not,â you say, holding up a hand like that might somehow physically block the idea from reaching you. Anaxa simply raises an eyebrow and adjusts his glasses.
âItâs not a request,â he replies, flipping through the stack of papers he brought with him. âItâs happening whether youâre on board or not. Your contractâs airtight.âÂ
âThatâs impossible,â you scoff, folding your arms defensively. âI specifically remember agreeing to no future projects involving him.â
âYeah, well, when youâre in a band that makes millions, the label doesnât exactly care about your personal vendettas. Fans have been begging for this for years. You know how much money this is going to make?â
âI canât do this, Anaxa. You know what heâs like. Heâs gonna make this a living hell for me.â
Your managerâs eyes soften just enough to make you look away. âLook, I know itâs not ideal. But itâs just a tour. A few months, and then you never have to see his face again if you donât want to.â
You hesitate, teeth worrying your bottom lip. Anxiety coils inside your stomach like a live wire. Youâd thought youâd buried that part of your lifeâleft it to rot somewhere in the wreckage of what used to be your band and your relationship. Mydeiâs name still leaves a bitter aftertaste whenever it slips out of someoneâs mouth.
But the label wants it. The fans want it.Â
âSo, whatâyou just expect me to pretend we didnât break up in front of the entire world?â you snap, though thereâs less fire behind it this time.
Anaxa shrugs and sets the contract on your coffee table. âPretend, donât pretend. Hell, make it part of the show for all I care. As long as youâre both on that stage together, the crowdâs going to eat it up.â
You hate how practical he sounds. How it almost makes sense. You glance at the contract, at the neat, tidy letters spelling out your own name and Mydeiâs right next to each other, and feel something bitter curl up in your chest.
âIâm gonna kill him,â you mutter.
Anaxa pats your shoulder as he heads for the door. âTry not to do it on stage. Though that might actually sell more tickets.â
You flip him off without looking, and Anaxa just laughs on his way out. The contract sits there on the coffee table, and no matter what you do, you canât seem to look away. Your eyes blur over the words, and all you can think about is him.
Mydei.
Youâve spent months forcing yourself not to say his name out loud, not to think about his legs tangled with yours in bed or the rasp of his voice in your ear when he couldnât keep his hands to himself before a show. You donât let yourself think about the songs you wrote together. You definitely donât think about the way it all fell apart. It was easier when you could pretend that part of your life was overâwhen you didnât have to picture his face or hear his voice in your head, mocking you with every love song you swore youâd never sing again.
With a resigned sigh, you grab the pen Anaxa had placed next to the contract papers and flip to the last page. Your signature comes out a little shaky, but itâs done. You let the pen drop onto the table and lean back against the cushions.Â
The rehearsal studio feels too small. Itâs ironic, reallyâafter spending years crammed into dingy vans and shitty motel rooms together, youâd think it wouldnât bother you. Youâre the first person there (Anaxa had threatened to personally drag you out of your apartment if you didnât show up on time), and because you donât know what else to do, you set about adjusting your mic stand.
Itâs stupid. You know itâs already set to your height, but it gives your hands something to do. The room is way too quiet, the walls lined with soundproofing and a few faded posters from when your bandâthe Chrysos Heirsâwas at its peak. Thereâs a familiar, musty smellâstale air and old fabricâand it makes your chest ache just a little.
Without really thinking about it, you start humming one of the old songsâone that never made it to an album, just something you and Mydei had messed around with one night in the back of a bus. The melody flows out of you like muscle memory, soft and a little shaky at first, but gaining strength as you let the lyrics slip past your lips.
âKiss me once and call me baby,Lie to me and say Iâm crazyâCanât believe I let you take meââ
The door swings open mid-verse, and you stop singing so fast it almost gives you whiplash.
Mydei steps inside, and for a second, you canât move. Itâs like being punched in the gutâseeing him again after all this time. He looks almost the same, and thatâs what pisses you off the most. The same messy hair, the same worn leather jacket hanging off his shoulders, that same stupid, self-assured expression. The only real difference is the hint of stubble lining his jaw, like he didnât bother shaving before showing up. Typical.
He stops just inside the door, guitar case slung over his shoulder, and his eyes lock onto yours. His expression doesnât give away muchâjust a calm, uninterested look, like he couldnât give a shit about being here. Your stomach twists, anger simmering just under your skin. Youâd spent months convincing yourself that youâd moved on, that he didnât matter anymore, but seeing him here, right in front of you, makes all that effort feel pointless. You hate that he still looks good.Â
He doesnât say anything, just drags his gaze over you like heâs sizing you up. You force yourself not to react, keeping your expression as neutral as possible, even though your hands are shaking where they grip the mic stand. You canât let him know how much this is messing with you. You refuse to give him the satisfaction.
Mydei glances at the mic stand, then back at you, and thereâs a flicker of something in his eyesâannoyance, maybe, or just plain indifference. You donât know which is worse. You half expect him to make some smartass comment about your singing earlier, but he doesnât say a word. Just sets his guitar case down on one of the couches and starts unzipping it, still not acknowledging you.
The way heâs ignoring you grates on your nerves. Youâre tempted to snap at him just to get some kind of reaction. But you know how that game goesâhow heâs always been good at pushing your buttons and making you the one who loses their cool first. Youâre not giving him the satisfaction today.
You busy yourself with the mic stand again, even though thereâs nothing to fix. Itâs something to do with your hands, at least. The air feels thick, and your chest feels tight, and you canât stop your mind from wandering back to late-night songwriting sessions and whispered promises that ended up meaning nothing. You wonder if he thinks about those nights tooâor if heâs just moved on completely while youâre still stuck in the aftermath.
The door swings open again, and Castorice and Hyacine walk in, chatting and laughing about something. They both pause when they see you and Mydei, exchanging a quick look before stepping inside.
âHi,â Castorice greets, adjusting the hem of her faded purple band t-shirt. âEverything okay here?â
You force a smile that probably looks more like a grimace. âYeah. All good.â
Hyacine gives you a small smile, her pigtails swinging, and starts setting up her bass. Castorice nudges Mydei with her elbow as she passes by, but he just shrugs her off and keeps tuning his guitar. She rolls her eyes and grabs her drumsticks.
You canât help but glare at him, half-hoping heâll look up so you can throw something snarky his way. Maybe if heâd just stop pretending like youâre invisible, you wouldnât feel like your chest is caving in. Youâre caught between wanting to scream at him and wanting to leave before your hands start shaking too hard to hide.
Phainon slips in a few minutes later, his snowy hair wind-ruffled and his jeans ripped at the knees. âAlready at each otherâs throats, huh?â he mutters, mostly to himself, but you hear it.
âNah,â you bite out. âNo oneâs dead yet.â
Phainon chuckles and unslings his guitar case. Itâs forced, yes, and you know heâs just trying to lighten the mood. It doesnât help much. Mydei doesnât even acknowledge the comment; he just keeps strumming a few notes like heâs deliberately tuning you out. You look away.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âChrysos Heirs: The Reunion Tour â Behind the Music. Episode One.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]Soft lighting. Castorice sits on a stool, tapping her drumsticks against her knee absentmindedly. She grins when she notices the camera.
CASTORICE: The first practice? Oh, man. That was a nightmare. I mean, I know it was gonna be awkward, butâwow. I half expected the room to just spontaneously combust. (Laughs) They didnât even look at each other for the first half hour. I thought Iâd have to throw a cymbal at someone just to break the ice.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, sitting cross-legged on the floor, her bass leaning against her shoulder.]
HYACINE: Honestly, I wasnât sure if theyâd even show up. _____ got there first, and Mydei came just before me and Cas showed up. When we walked in⊠(Sighs) It was like stepping into a freezer. I kept looking at Castorice like, Are we really doing this?
[CUT TO: PHAINON, leaning against the wall with his guitar propped up next to him.]
PHAINON: You could cut the tension with a knife. I was just waiting for one of them to snap, honestly. ____ was messing with the mic stand like it owed her money, and Mydeiâ(snorts) he just acted like he didnât give a shit. Everyone knows he does, though. I could see his hands shaking a little while he was tuning his guitar.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, slouched on the couch, arms crossed.]
MYDEI: First practice? Whatever. I showed up, didnât I? (Shrugs) _____ was already there, singing something I wrote. I didnât say anything. Didnât feel like arguing. Didnât feel like⊠dealing with that. (Pauses) We got through it. Thatâs what matters.
[CUT TO: YOU, sitting on a folding chair, arms crossed, eyes fixed somewhere off camera.]
YOU: I didnât think heâd actually come. And when he did⊠(shakes head) I was just angry. At him, at myself. At the fact that he didnât even look at me. We used to be⊠I donât know. Better than that. He didnât say anything to me, and I wasnât gonna be the one to break first. We both have too much pride.
[CUT TO: CASTORICE AGAIN, twirling a drumstick between her fingers.]
CASTORICE: Eventually, I just started playing something random to break the silence. That usually worked back thenâget the rhythm going, and the rest will follow. I guess some things never change, because once I started up, Phainon joined in, and Hyacine just kinda jumped in too. ____ and Mydei just stared at each other like it was some kind of weird staring contest.
[CUT TO: HYACINE AGAIN, laughing softly.]
HYACINE: I thought one of them was gonna strangle the other before we even got to the chorus. But after a few minutes of us just messing around with the intro, _____ gave in and started singing. Mydei followedâstubborn assholeâbut it actually sounded good. Like, almost better than I remembered.
[CUT TO: PHAINON AGAIN, smiling with his eyes crinkled at the corners.]
PHAINON: It was a mess. A beautiful mess. Thatâs just how it is with us. Always on the edge of imploding but somehow making it work. They didnât say a word to each other the whole practice, but the music spoke for them. Itâs weird how that works, huh?
[CUT TO: MYDEI, still looking annoyed, but his jaw clenches a little.]
MYDEI: We got through the set. It wasnât⊠terrible. (Pauses) She still sings like sheâs got something to prove. Never really lost that passion. I guess thatâs one thing that hasnât changed.
[CUT TO: YOU, looking almost hesitant.]
YOU: The music was the only thing that didnât feel different. Thatâs the worst part. We still fit together on stage. I donât know how to feel about that.
ii). he had an ego and a temper and a wandering eye.
The venue is packed, lights flashing in time with the beats of the opening song. Castorice is good. That hasnât changed, not even a little. The heat of the stage lights is already making sweat prickle at the back of your neck, but you force yourself to ignore it, keeping your eyes fixed on the dark mass of people in front of you. You can barely make out individual faces past the glare, but it doesnât matterâtheyâre all screaming, hands in the air, chanting your bandâs name like a war cry.
To your left, Hyacineâs fingers fly over the bass strings, head bobbing in time with the rhythm. Her eyes are focused and sharp, lips curved into a smile. Next to her, Phainon strums his guitar, sweat dripping down his temples. Heâs got that manic grin on his face, the one that always surfaces when heâs deep in the music.
Youâre trying to focusâkeep your voice steady, keep your hands from shakingâbut itâs hard when you know heâs right behind you, adjusting his guitar strap and dragging his pick over the strings just loud enough to be a distraction. You swear heâs doing it on purpose, plucking random notes like heâs got nothing better to do, just to see if he can make you crack.
You refuse to look back at him. Instead, you take a slow breath and lean into the mic, eyes half-lidded and voice low as you speak to the crowd.
âHey, everyone,â you drawl, and the noise swells, cheers and screams merging into a single deafening roar. You give them a crooked smile. âFeels good to be back. Did you guys miss us?â
The crowd roars. You can feel itâthe way theyâve been waiting for this, for you. You ignore the way it makes your throat close up a little, focusing instead on the setlist displayed on the prompter. The opening song is one of your older hits, the kind of thing that used to play on the radio at least once a day back when it was first released. Youâve sung it a thousand times before, but tonight, it feels different. Heâs right there, and you hate how you can feel his presence without even looking.
The drums kick in, pounding through your ribs, and you throw yourself into the first verse.
âBite your tongue âtil it bleeds, Hide the bruises on your knees, Say you never caredâ I know youâre lying through your teeth.â
Your voice is steady, loud enough to carry over the instruments as the crowd sings with you. You almost lose yourself in it. The light pulses red and white, casting shadows across the stage, and you grip the mic stand tighter, putting every ounce of frustration into your performance.
Out of the corner of your eye, you see Mydei move closer to his mic, his guitar slung low and his fingers dancing over the strings. You force yourself not to look at him, focusing on the rhythm instead, on keeping your breathing even as the verse transitions into the chorus.
âBittersweet vendetta, Carved your name into my skin, Kiss me like a secret. Make me wish Iâd never let you in.â
You push your voice harder, practically shouting the last line, and the crowdâs response is instantaneousâvoices rising to meet yours, some of them screaming loud enough to rival the speakers. You finally risk a glance to your right, just in time to see Mydeiâs lips curve into a smirk, his head tilted like heâs daring you to acknowledge him.
He leans into the mic, and his voice slices through the air.
âShe lies like she means it, Fake love on her lipsââ
You clench your jaw so hard it aches, but you donât miss your next cue, even though your mind is reeling. Thatâs not the original line. Heâs never changed it beforeânot in all the years you performed this song together. You shove down the surge of anger, forcing yourself to keep going as if nothing happened.
The audience reacts immediatelyâsome laughing, some whooping. You know they heard it. You know he did it just to get a rise out of you. You hate that itâs working, that your pulse is thrumming in your ears and your hands are shaking even as you keep your expression blank.
You donât look at him. Instead, you pour every ounce of your irritation into the next verse, voice dropping low and venomous.
âCut me down with your clever words, Always knew how to make it hurt, Fake your way to heaven, But Iâd follow you through hell first.â
You swear you hear Mydei laugh under his breath, but he keeps playing like nothingâs wrong, his fingers moving over the strings like second nature. Your stomach twists, and you canât tell if itâs fury or something uglierâsomething that feels like regret buried under years of resentment.
The bridge comes crashing in, and you give it everything youâve got. Your voice is raw and unrestrained.
âSwore Iâd never write about you, Guess I lied again somehow, Made my bed on broken promises, Tell meâare you happy now?â
The crowdâs roar almost drowns you out, but you donât let up, spitting out the words like theyâre poison on your tongue. Youâre breathless by the time the final chorus hits, and the last line comes out almost like a snarl.
When the song ends, the audience erupts, and you finally allow yourself a moment to breathe, wiping sweat from your forehead with your palm. Your ears are ringing, but you catch a glimpse of Mydei as he steps back from his mic, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. He doesnât look at you. Nor does he seem to particularly care that he just tore through one of your most iconic songs with a cheap, unnecessary jab.
You force a smile and wave to the crowd.
The moment the stage lights cut out and the cheers of the crowd fade behind the heavy backstage door, youâre off. You donât bother thanking the crew or even stopping to catch your breathâyou just march straight to the green room, hands still trembling from the adrenaline and the anger. Your heartâs pounding so loud in your ears that you barely hear the door swing open behind you.
You whirl around just as Mydei walks in, still wiping sweat off his face with the hem of his shirt. The sight of himâsmirking like he didnât just pull that shit on stageâmakes your stomach twist with rage.
âWhat the fuck was that?â Your voice comes out harsher than you intended, but you donât care.
Mydei just raises an eyebrow, like heâs confused about why youâre yelling. âWhat was what?â
âDonât play fucking dumb,â you snap. âYou changed the fucking lyrics. You know exactly what Iâm talking about.â
He just shrugs and tosses his towel onto one of the chairs. âOh, that. Yeah, I thought it sounded better. More honest.â
You take a step closer, jabbing a finger at him. âYou donât get to do that. You donât get to just rewrite shit on stage without telling anyone. We practiced that song a hundred times, Mydei. What the hell is wrong with you?â
âYouâre really gonna get this worked up over one line?â He scoffs, running a hand through his sweat-damp hair. âCome on, itâs not that deep.â
âNot that deep?â You laugh, but itâs humourless and cold. âYou made it sound like Iâm some kind of manipulative bitch in front of thousands of people! How the hell am I supposed to not get worked up about that?â
âMaybe if it wasnât true, it wouldnât bother you so much,â he says, leaning back against the wall.
Your jaw drops. âExcuse me?â
Mydei shrugs again, his voice low and taunting. âYou always were good at faking itâfeelings, sincerity, the whole tragic frontwoman act. Sorry if I just cut through the bullshit.â
Something snaps inside you, and before you even realise it, you shove him backwards with both hands. Mydei doesnât stumble, but his smirk falls for just a secondâjust enough to make you feel a flicker of satisfaction.
âFuck you,â you spit out. âYou donât know a single thing about me.â
His face hardens, and he pushes off the wall to get right back into your space. âDonât I? I know you lie like itâs second nature. You get off on being the victim, pretending like youâre the one who got hurt. But we both know youâre just as guilty as I am.â
âYouâre a fucking asshole.â Youâre breathing hard now, fists clenched at your sides to keep from swinging at him. âYouâre the one who decided to leave the band first. Iâm not the one who bailed.â
âYeah, because sticking around and watching you sabotage everything we built together sounded like a blast. Youâre impossible to deal with. Always have been.â
âYou think Iâm impossible? Youâre the one who picks a fight every chance you get. Itâs like you canât stand if Iâm not miserable,â you shoot back. âNewsflash, Mydeiânot everythingâs about you and your bruised ego.â
âSays the girl who canât stand it when someone calls her out,â he says, lips curling into a mocking grin. âMaybe I hit a nerve because you know Iâm right. Youâre so used to being adored that the second someone questions you, you lose your shit.â
You shove him again, harder this time, and he doesnât moveâjust stays rooted to the spot, glaring down at you. âGod, I hate you,â you seethe, voice cracking despite yourself.
âFunny. Didnât sound like hate the last time you were screaming my name.â
You freeze, heat rushing to your face, and the anger bubbles into something darkerâsomething desperate and bitter. âYou think youâre so fucking clever, donât you? Always gotta have the last word, always gotta prove something. Youâre pathetic.â
âYouâre one to talk,â he grits out. âStill hung up on shit that happened years ago. Iâm pathetic? Youâre the one still singing about heartbreak like itâs gonna make people feel sorry for you.â
You want to hit him. You want to scream at him until your voice breaks. Instead, you shove him again, and this time he catches your wrists, yanking you forward until your chest brushes his. His face is inches from yours, breath hot against your cheek.
âAdmit it,â Mydei murmurs, low. âYouâre pissed because I called you out, and now you canât hide behind your lyrics like a coward.â
You wrench your hands free, but you donât move back. Youâre too close, breathing hard. âYouâre such a fucking asshole,â you whisper, voice tight.
His eyes bore into yours. âAnd youâre a goddamn liar.â
Before either of you can say anything else, Hyacine pushes the door open with a scowl. She takes one look at the two of you and shakes her head. âSeriously? Already? I knew this tour would be a shitshow, but I didnât think youâd try to kill each other on night one.â
You finally rip yourself away from him, swiping at your face like youâre trying to scrub the confrontation off your skin. Mydei doesnât look at you. He just picks up his towel and wipes his hands.
Castorice slips in behind Hyacine, still buzzing from the performance. âKephale, you two are like feral cats. Canât we just chill for five seconds?â
âWeâve got interviews in ten minutes,â Phainon pipes up from behind her. âYou guys need to get your shit together.â
Hyacine levels both of you with a glare. âI donât care what personal shit youâve got going on, but donât pull that crap on stage again. Mydei, you donât change the lyrics without telling us. _____, stop feeding into his bullshit. Youâre both being idiots.â
Neither of you says anything, but youâre still seething, trying to force down the bitter ache in your chest. Mydei rolls his shoulders and turns away, his shaggy hair falling down the nape of his neck. When you finally turn and leave the room, you can still feel his eyes on your back, and it makes your skin crawl. You tell yourself youâre just glad to be away from him, but the knot in your stomach says otherwise.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âOpening Night â Sold Out.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: CASTORICE, her expression thoughtful.]
CASTORICE: Okay, look, Iâm not gonna go around pinning the blame on anyone. That doesnât do anyone any good. (Shifts slightly) I just think that weâre all adults here, and what Mydei and _____ were doing didnât do us any favours.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, scowling at the camera.]
HYACINE: Theyâre pretty f***ing immature, if you ask me. Sometimes I think Mydei and _____ forget that theyâre not the only people in the band. They founded it, sure, but what about me, Cas, and Phainon? This isnât just some petty high school-level battle of the bands shit. This is our f***ing careers weâre talking about.
[CUT TO: PHAINON, leaning back with a cigarette rolling between his fingers.]
PHAINON: Yeah, itâs real inspiring when your frontmen are trying to rip each otherâs heads off backstage. Real rock and roll. (Scoffs) Look, theyâre both stubborn as hell, and itâs not like we didnât see it coming. You put two people with that much history on the same stage, and itâs like throwing a match into gasoline.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, arms spread out on the back of the couch.]
MYDEI: Itâs not my fault she canât handle the truth. Weâre supposed to be putting on a show, arenât we? Guess whatâdramaâs a part of it. If she wants to get pissed because I added a little honesty to the setlist, thatâs on her. (Shrugs) Iâm not gonna apologise for making it real.
[CUT TO: YOU, visibly tense, gripping the edge of your seat.]
YOU: He didnât change the lyrics because it was real. He did it to hurt me. Thereâs a difference. Itâs not about the fans, or the show, or whatever bullshit excuse heâs telling himself. Itâs about control. He just couldnât stand the fact that I was getting through it without him, that I was⊠fine. (Pauses) Or at least trying to be.
[CUT TO: CASTORICE AGAIN, rubbing the back of her neck.]
CASTORICE: (Sighs) Youâd think that after all these years, theyâd have learned how to work together without turning it into a battlefield. Weâre not in high school anymore. Weâre on tour. If one of them messes up, itâs not just their mess to clean upâitâs all of ours.
[CUT TO: HYACINE AGAIN, looking more annoyed than before.]
HYACINE: Itâs exhausting. Weâre just trying to make music, not mediate whatever unresolved shit theyâve got going on. Half the time, I feel like Iâm babysitting. They either need to figure it out or shut the hell up and be professional for once.
[CUT TO: PHAINON AGAIN, giving a resigned laugh.]
PHAINON: Honestly, if theyâd just screw and get it over with, we might finally get some peace around here.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, AGAIN]
MYDEI: Phainon said that? Not a chance. Iâd rather set my guitar on fire.
[CUT TO: YOU AGAIN, rolling your eyes.]
YOU: Yeah, well, might be the most impressive thing Mydeiâs done in a while.
iii). do i love him? do i hate him? i guess itâs up and down.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âThe Foundersâ Cut.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: YOU, sitting upright with your arms crossed.]
INTERVIEWER (off-camera): Can you tell us about the bandâs early days? How did the Chrysos Heirs come together?
YOU: God, that feels like forever ago. (Pauses) It was just me and Mydei at first. We were⊠just kids, really. Weâd meet up after school in my dadâs garageâhim on guitar, me scribbling down lyrics on whatever scraps of paper we could find. It wasnât anything serious back then. We just wanted to make noise and piss off the neighbours.
INTERVIEWER: Did you always know it was going to be a band?
YOU: (Shakes head) Not at all. We didnât plan for it to be anything more than a way to kill time. Weâd play until our fingers ached or Dad came out yelling at us to cut it out. (Smiles a little) It was messy and loud andâfun. We didnât think much past that.
INTERVIEWER: When did it start to feel like more than just noise?
YOU: When Castorice came into the picture. She was incredible. She had this way of making everything tighter, more precise. Like she just knew what needed to happen to make the sound click. Mydei knew her from some music workshop thingâsaid she was the only drummer heâd met who wasnât full of shit. (Laughs softly) One day, she just showed up with this beat-up drum set and told us our timing was crap. And she was right.
INTERVIEWER: What was your reaction to her criticism?
YOU: Oh, I was pissed. I didnât want some stranger telling us we were doing it wrong. But she wasnât mean about itâjust honest, I suppose. And once she started playing, we couldnât really argue with her. She made us sound like an actual band.
INTERVIEWER: And Hyacine and Phainon? How did they join?
YOU: They came later. Weâd been playing these tiny, shitty bar showsâbarely getting paid, just trying to scrape together enough for gas and food. It was clear we needed a bassist. Castorice was the one who pushed for it. She said we sounded hollow without that low end. She knew Hyacine from some other band that had just implodedâsome drama I never got the full story on. Hyacine came in and just took over. She was relentless, always pushing for perfection. It drove me and Mydei crazy at first, but she made us sound good. Really good.
INTERVIEWER: And Phainon?
YOU: (Smiles fondly) Phainon was a surprise. Mydei found him at some underground gigâhe was up there shredding like it was the easiest thing in the world. Mydei practically dragged him to rehearsal the next day, and Phainon barely said a word. He just picked up his guitar and played like heâd been with us the whole time. We didnât even have to teach him the songsâhe just⊠knew. It was weird, but it worked.
INTERVIEWER: What was it like performing together back then?
YOU: Incredible. We werenât perfect by any meansâweâd f**k up chord changes and stumble over lyrics, but people didnât care. There was this energy that made up for it. The crowd felt it too. Weâd get off stage, drenched in sweat, hearts pounding, and just laugh about how much we almost screwed up. Those shows were something else.
INTERVIEWER: And what about you and Mydei? You two were already together by then?
YOU: (Pauses, glancing away) Yeah. It just happened. It wasnât really something we talked aboutâit just made sense at the time. We were always around each other anyway.
INTERVIEWER: What changed?
YOU: (Exhales slowly) Success changed things. Suddenly we were everywhereâtouring, interviews, non-stop shows. We didnât have time to breathe, let alone talk about anything that mattered. It was just⊠go, go, go. And when things got tough, we didnât know how to handle it. We didnât talk. We just fought. About stupid shitâlyrics, setlists, tempos. It wasnât about the band anymore. It was about us, trying to hurt each other without admitting thatâs what we were doing.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, leaning back in his chair with one arm thrown across the back of it.]
INTERVIEWER (off-camera): Can you talk about why you left the band?
MYDEI: (Exhales, looks away for a moment) It wasnât⊠one thing, you know? People always want it to be simple, like thereâs one big reason I just up and left. But it wasnât. There was justâtoo much shit piling up. Tension between all of us, pressure from the label, and I wasnât in the right headspace to deal with it.
INTERVIEWER: Do you regret it?
MYDEI: Sometimes. Maybe. I didnât really think about what it would do to the others at the time. I needed to figure out who I was without the band. It was selfish, I know, but I couldnât keep pretending I was okay with how things were going.
INTERVIEWER: Were you unhappy with the band itself, or just the dynamics between the members?
MYDEI: Both, I guess. The band was everything to me at one point. It was the one thing I thought I could count on. But then it just got⊠complicated. We went from just being a bunch of idiots messing around to something huge, and I wasnât ready for that kind of pressure. The music stopped feeling like oursâlike mine. It was just what everyone else wanted from us.
INTERVIEWER: How did the others react when you told them you were leaving?
MYDEI: (Chuckles bitterly) Not well. Castorice tried to talk me out of itâsaid I was being impulsive and throwing away something weâd built from the ground up. Hyacine was pissed. She didnât say much, but I could tell she was angry. Phainon didnât say anything at all. Just kind of⊠stared at me like Iâd betrayed him or something.
INTERVIEWER: And _____?
MYDEI: (Stiffens) She didnât take it well. She said I was running awayâlike I always did. We fought about it for hours. Nothing we said made sense by the end of it. Just yelling for the sake of yelling. I think we both knew it wasnât just about the band at that point.
INTERVIEWER: After you left, the Chrysos Heirs seemed to almost dissolve overnight. Can you talk about that?
MYDEI: (Breathes out slowly) Yeah, I heard about it a few months later. It wasnât something I expected. I thought theyâd keep going without me, honestly. I didnât think I was that important. (Pauses) Turns out, though, that me leaving kind of pulled the rug out from under everything.Â
INTERVIEWER: Did the others ever talk to you about it?
MYDEI: Castorice called me once. She didnât say much, just that theyâd decided to take a break, and that without me there, it wasnât working. She didnât blame me, exactly, but I could hear it in her voice. Like she was trying not to say that Iâd screwed everything up. (Shakes his head) Phainon never reached out. I donât know if he was angry or justâdisappointed. Hyacine texted me some stuff, mostly updates, but nothing about how they felt about it.
INTERVIEWER: What about _____?
MYDEI: (Tenses visibly) We never spoke to each other after I left.
INTERVIEWER: Do you think that the band dissolving hurt her the most?
MYDEI: Yeah. I know it did. The band was everything to herâmore than it was to any of us, I think. She was always the one pushing us to go further, to make better music, to keep going even when it was hard. So when it all fell apart⊠I know she took it personally. Like she failed or something. Especially when I saw her trying to do solo stuff after that.Â
INTERVIEWER: Did you listen to her solo work?
MYDEI: (Nods) Every track. It was goodâdifferent, but good.
The studio lights beat down on you like a relentless sun, and you resist the urge to wipe at the thin sheen of sweat forming at your hairline. You force yourself to smile through it, shoulders squared and posture just right, even as your muscles ache from holding the same position for too long. Castorice mutters under her breath about how awkward it feels to act casual when thereâs a giant lens pointed right at your face; you canât help but agree. Itâs been ages since the last group photoshoot, and the discomfort is hard to ignore.
Mydei stands at the far end, stiff and distant, hands stuffed into the pockets of his leather jacket. Heâs staring at some fixed point behind the photographerâs head, looking like heâs seconds away from bolting. It drives you insane how obvious heâs being about not wanting to be here. You catch his eye once, and the look he gives you is so blank, itâs almost insulting.
Castorice throws an arm across Phainonâs shoulders, and the two lean into each other. Hyacine sits cross-legged in front of you, holding up two peace signs and grinning widely.
âAll right, good! Thatâs enough for the group shots,â Aglaea, the director of photography, calls out, clapping her hands together. âEveryone but Mydei and _____, take five. I want a few duo shots.â
You stiffen. Castorice glances between the two of you with something close to worry, but when you shoot her a tight smile, she just shrugs and heads off with Hyacine and Phainon in tow.
Mydei hasnât moved an inch, his hands still stuffed into his pockets, jaw tight. You take a slow breath and will yourself not to let him get under your skin. Not again.
Aglaea gestures you both forward, clearly sensing the awkwardness but too professional to comment on it. âAll right, you two. Letâs lean into the chemistry a bit. I want intimate and rawâlike the worldâs finally looking at you both behind the professional masks.â
Your lips press into a thin line. Mydei doesnât react at all.
âFace each other,â Aglaea instructs, waving a hand to adjust the lighting. It catches on the bright gold of her blouse, and you blink a little. âMydei, hands on her waist. _____, put your hands on his shoulders. Closer. I need to feel the tension. Like youâre caught between fighting and kissing.â
You almost laugh at the irony. Thatâs practically all youâve done since he showed up againâhovering somewhere between wanting to scream at him and wanting to grab his face and never let go. The thought burns. You squash it as you step forward.
Mydeiâs hands settle on your waist, and itâs as if electricity crackles through you, setting every nerve alight. His touch is hesitant, like heâs not sure he has the right to be this close anymore. Your hands come up to his shoulders, fingers brushing over familiar leather and muscle, and you force yourself to look up at him.
His eyes catch yours. Neither of you moves. He looks at you like heâs seeing something he thought heâd lost, and it makes your heart twist painfully.
âCloser,â Aglaea calls out, voice clipped. âMydei, lean in like youâre about to say something youâve been holding back for years. _____, tilt your chin upâgive him that look, like youâre angry but imploring.â
You do as she says, your breath hitching when his forehead dips to rest against yours. Your fingers tighten against his shoulders, and his hands shift on your waist, thumbs brushing over the fabric of your shirt like heâs trying to memorise the feel of it. Those strands of hair that he always braids because he claimed it made him look âedgyâ brushes against the curve of your cheek. You can feel his breath fan across your face, warm and familiar, and it hurts how natural it feels.
When you look to the side, Aglaea is frowning. âCloser,â she says again. âI need to see that longing.â
You donât bother hiding your scoff, muttering under your breath, âMaybe itâd be easier if he didnât look like heâd rather be doing literally anything else.â
His eyes snap to yours, defensive. âSorry Iâm not putting on enough of a show for you,â he mutters back, just loud enough for you to hear.
âMaybe if you actually gave a damn, it wouldnât feel like pulling teeth,â you hiss.
He narrows his eyes, tightening his grip just a fraction, enough to make your pulse jump. âThere you fucking go again. Acting like youâre the only one who cares about this.â
You force yourself to keep the smile plastered on your face for the camera, teeth clenched. âOh, forgive me for thinking you donât give a shit. Itâs not like you havenât disappeared for months without a word.â
âYou think I wanted to leave?â
âYou didnât exactly try to stay,â you snap, fingers digging into his shoulders. âYou left me to deal with the fallout while you got to play the tortured artist somewhere else. And now youâre back, and youâre acting like none of it mattered.â
âYou didnât want me to stay,â he says, barely more than a whisper. âYou didnât even ask.â
The accusation slices through you, and your grip on his shoulders loosens. âHow was I supposed to ask when you made up your mind without me?â you fire back. âYou made it clear that I wasnât worth staying for.â
His expression hardens, like heâs trying to cover the hurt bleeding through his anger. âThatâs not fair. You never once asked how I felt about it. You just decided I didnât care.â
You want to scream at him for being so obliviousâfor acting like you didnât spend weeks waiting for a call that never came. Instead, you force your lips into a tight, brittle smile. âGuess you made it pretty damn convincing when you left even though I asked you to stay.â
Something in his eyes cracks, just for a moment, but then Aglaeaâs voice cuts through.
âYes! Thatâs it!â she crows. âKeep it up. Mydei, cup her face.â
He doesnât move at first, just stares down at you, his breath coming out in uneven bursts. Then his hand lifts, cupping your jaw, his thumb brushing over your cheek like itâs muscle memory. The way he looks at you, then, makes your throat close up.
You want to push him away, but your hands stay where they are, like theyâre glued to him. Aglaea calls out more instructions, but her voice is distantâjust noise behind the thunder in your chest.
When she finally calls for a wrap, you step back, your hands falling limply to your sides. Mydeiâs arms drop away from you, his face shuttered and closed off again. You donât look at him as you turn on your heel and walk off to the break room, every muscle in your body screaming with the urge to just get away from him before you say something even worse.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âThe Membersâ Cut.â
The screen fades out into grainy footage from an old concert: Mydei and _____ on stage, harmonising, Mydei strumming his guitar while _____ sways with the mic. The audience sways as one, flashlights held up as they move in time with the song. The video fades out.
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: PHAINON, sitting cross-legged on a couch, an easy smile on his face.]
PHAINON: Back then? Man, they were something else. Youâd think they were fused at the hip with how much time they spent together. Writing songs at three in the morning, huddled over some crumpled notebook, arguing about chord progressions one second and laughing the next. I donât think Iâve ever seen two people make something so good while simultaneously wanting to strangle each other. It was weirdly sweet.
[CUT TO: CASTORICE, sitting in a green room with her legs swung over the arm of a chair.]
CASTORICE: _____ used to steal Mydeiâs hoodies every time we hit a new city. Didnât matter how hot it wasâsheâd be drowning in that thing, sleeves halfway covering her hands. Mydeiâd just roll his eyes and mumble something about it smelling weird when he got it back, but he never complained. Theyâd go on these stupid little coffee dates whenever we had downtimeâjust the two of them, sneaking off like no one would notice. We noticed. Everyone noticed.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, sitting on the floor of the green room.]
HYACINE: Honestly? Their songs were the best ones we ever wrote. Together, they just⊠clicked. It was effortless. I think the first time I heard âAfter Midnightâ, I kinda wanted to throw up from how sweet it was. But you could tellâevery word, every noteâthey put their whole hearts into it. It was like they were making something for just the two of them, and the rest of us were lucky to get a piece of it.
[CUT TO: PHAINON AGAIN, still sporting that easy smile.]
PHAINON: But, yâknow, things got complicated. Like they always do. Theyâre both stubborn as hell, and neither of them knows how to sit down and talk without throwing metaphorical knives at each other. Still⊠(Laughs softly) I stand by what I said. If they screw each other and get it over with, everyoneâs gonna be okay.
iv). wanna kiss his face with an uppercut.
Youâre sprawled across the hotel bed, face buried in the pillow, when your phone rings. You groan, tempted to ignore it, but the screen flashes Anaxagorasâ name, and you know better than to let it go to voicemail.
You pick up and press the phone to your ear. âYeah?â
âDonât sound so enthusiastic,â Anaxa deadpans. His voice is brisk, no-nonsense as always. âIâm just checking in.â
âFantastic,â you say dryly, sitting up and running a hand through your hair. âPhotoshoot went great. Almost fought Mydei. Twice.â
âGreat Kephale,â he mutters, and you can imagine him pinching the bridge of his nose. âAre you two still at each otherâs throats?â
âItâs kind of hard not to be when he acts like breathing the same air as me is a personal insult,â you snap. âAglaea made us take those stupid couple shots, and he looked like he wanted to die the whole time. Itâsââ You break off, clenching your jaw. âItâs annoying.â
Anaxa grunts, unimpressed. âYouâre letting him get to you.â
âYeah, no shit.â
âThen stop it,â he says, as if itâs that easy. âYou donât have to like him, but you do have to get through this. Itâs one shoot and a few public appearances. Youâve handled worse.â
âThatâs the problem. Itâs not supposed to be worse. Weâre supposed to be professionals, but heâsâheâs making it impossible.â
Anaxa doesnât answer right away, but when he does, his tone is firm. âLook, if he wants to act like a child, let him. You donât have to stoop to his level. Smile for the camera, grit your teeth if you have to, and donât give him the satisfaction of knowing heâs pissing you off.â
You hate that heâs right. âYeah. I know.â
âYou want me to handle anything?â
âNo,â you say quickly, shaking your head even though he canât see it. âIâll deal with it.â
He doesnât bother with goodbyes, just hangs up like always. You let your phone drop onto the bed and slump back down, staring up at the ceiling. You hate that itâs still gnawing at youâthe frustration, the hurt, the way Mydeiâs indifference feels like a punch to the gut every single time.
You tell yourself itâs fine. You can handle it. Youâve been through worse.
A knock at the door startles you out of your thoughts. You blink, wondering if you imagined it, but then it comes againâmore impatient, this time. You groan and push yourself up, dragging your feet as you cross the room. Your muscles still ache from the photoshoot, and your mood hasnât improved because of Anaxaâs call.
You pull the door open, expecting maybe Castorice or one of the others, but itâs Mydei. He leans against the doorframe, hands shoved into his jacket pockets, his jaw set in that familiar way that makes you want to slam the door right in his face.
âWhat do you want?â you snap, not even attempting to sound polite.
He glances away, gaze fixed on some spot above your shoulder. âIâ Just wanted toââ
âOh, please,â you interrupt. âLike you fucking care.â
âDonât start.â
âIâm starting,â you snap back, âbecause you spent the whole fucking day making it perfectly clear that breathing the same air as me is unbearable, and now youâre playing concerned? Do you even look at yourself?â
âMaybe I do care,â he tells you, and you cut in again.
âYouâre the one who looked like heâd rather die than put his hands on me. Trust me, I noticed.â
âItâs not thatââ He cuts himself off, jaw clenched, and steps closer. âYou donât get it.â
âThen explain it to me!â you shoot back, shoving his shoulder. âYou canât just act like a dick and expect me to read your mind. Or are you still too much of a coward to admit anything out loud?â
That hits a nerve. His eyes flash, and he steps into your space, so close you can feel the heat coming off him. âMaybe if you didnât act so fucking righteous all the time, I wouldnât feel like Iâm losing my mind around you,â he spits out.
âYeah?â you challenge, shoving him again just to get him to react. âMaybe if you didnât keep running away every time something actually matters, we wouldnât be stuck in this stupid cycle!â
He grabs your wrist, yanking you even closer, and you can feel his breath on your face, warm and ragged. âIâm not running.â
âYes, you are,â you hiss, your voice cracking despite yourself. âYou always do. You think if you act like nothing happened, itâll just go away. Well, fuck you, Mydei, because it doesnât.â
He looks at you like he wants to argue, but his jaw works soundlessly, and youâre so sick of itâso tired of dancing around whateverâs been festering between you since the band split. Before you know it, your hands are gripping the front of his jacket, yanking him forward just as he crushes his mouth against yours.
Itâs not soft or carefulânothing about it is gentle. Itâs teeth and heat and frustration, like trying to punish each other for every stupid fight, every missed chance. He makes a low, frustrated noise, backing you into the room and kicking the door shut behind him.
Your hands are tangled in his hair now, and his grip on your waist is bruising, like heâs terrified youâll pull away. You bite down on his lower lip, and he groans against your mouth, pressing you back until your spine meets the wall.
âYouâre an asshole,â you mutter against his lips, barely catching your breath.
He just smirks, dragging his mouth down to your jaw, his voice rough and breathless. âYeah? Youâre not much better.â
Your fingers tighten in his hair, and he doesnât even try to hide the shiver that rolls through him. You hate himâyou hate him so much for making you feel like this, for pushing and pulling and never letting you breathe. But right now, with his mouth on yours and his hands on your body and heat pooling inside your stomach, the only thing you can think of is him taking you against the wall.
You barely register the way Mydei lifts you off the ground, your legs wrapping instinctively around his waist as he pins you to the wall. His mouth is hot and unrelenting against yours, like heâs trying to erase every insult youâve ever thrown at him. Youâre just as ruthless, biting at his lips and tugging his hair hard enough to make him growl.
He eases you down when you moanâembarrassingly loudly, but you donât give a fuck. His hand slides under the waistband of your jeans, and you donât stop him. You let him tug them down, the denim sliding down your legs and pooling at your ankles. Mydei lifts you up, just so you stand on your tiptoes long enough for him to kick them aside. Every brush of his skin against yours feels like an assaultâevery touch a reminder of all the hurt, all the angerâbut you donât pull away.Â
You hate him. You love him. You need him.
His hands slide down to your thighs, gripping tight enough to leave marks, and then he pulls back, panting, his eyes dark and wild. Youâre wet by now, enough that your underwear feels cool from where a damp spot has formed already.
âYou always have to have the last fucking word, donât you?â he grits out.
You scoff. âSomeoneâs gotta knock you off your high horse.â
He huffs a laugh, but itâs rough. Without warning, he drops to his knees, his hands slipping under your thighs to keep you steady as he buries his face between your legs.
You gasp, one hand flying to the wall to brace yourself, the other still tangled in his hair. Mydei doesnât waste any timeâheâs ruthless, licking you through the fabric of your panties. It makes your head spin. You choke on a moan, trying to squirm, but he just tightens his grip, keeping you firmly in place.
âMydeiââ you start, but his teeth graze your inner thigh, and your words dissolve into a shuddering gasp.
âShut up,â he mutters, yanking your underwear to the side and pressing his mouth against your folds with a fierce sort of hunger. His tongue flicks over your clit, and your head falls back against the wall, a keening sound leaving your throat.
âGod, youâre such an asshole,â you manage to choke out, even as your thighs tremble around his head.
He laughs against you, the vibrations making you bite down on your lip to stifle a whimper. âYouâre still running your mouth,â he taunts, giving your thigh a squeeze. âWonder if I can make you shut up.â
He doubles down, sucking your clit between his lips and flicking his tongue in a manner that has you seeing stars. Your nails scrape against his scalp, and he just groans in response, the vibrations sending another shockwave through you. Your hips jerk forward. He grips you harder, dragging his mouth down to lick at your folds like heâs starved for it.
Your fingers tighten in his hair. You canât help the way you tug him closer, grinding against his face despite yourself. Mydei merely hums approvingly, his hands sliding under your ass to lift you higher, pressing you harder against the wall.
When his tongue dips inside your clenching hole, your knees almost give out, but he holds you steady, refusing to let you escape the overwhelming, maddening pleasure. Youâre barely breathing, trying to swallow down the sounds threatening to spill out, but when he curls his tongue just right, you canât stop the loud, desperate moan that breaks free.
He pulls back just enough to smirk up at you, his lips slick and his eyes burning. âYou done being a brat now?â
You glare down at him, panting and still shaking. âFuck you.â
His smirk only widens, and before you can blink, heâs pressing his mouth against you againârough, merciless, relentless. It doesnât take long before your vision blurs and your head tips back, his name tearing from your lips as you come against his mouth.
He doesnât stop until your thighs are trembling and your grip on his hair has gone slack, and even then, he licks you through the aftershocks like heâs addicted to the taste of you. When he finally pulls back, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, he stands, and says, âYouâll give me one more, wonât you?â
Your breath comes out in shallow pants. You can barely muster the energy to glare at him, but his smirk only grows as he straightens up, dragging his hands up your sides and pushing your shirt higher until itâs bunched under your arms. Youâre still too dazed to protest when he lifts it over your head, tossing it to the floor before his hands find your waist again, pulling you flush against him.
He dips down to kiss you, and you taste yourself on his lipsâsweet and dizzying all at once. Youâre still recovering from your climax, but it doesnât matterâhe kisses you like heâs making up for every second he hasnât touched you, rough and a little desperate, his hands squeezing your hips.
His hands slide up your back, finding the clasp of your bra. You donât even have time to catch your breath before he unhooks it and slides and straps down your arms, tossing it aside without a second thought. His mouth is back on yours in an instant, but his hands cup your breasts, thumbs brushing over your nipples in a way that makes your back arch off the wall.
You donât even think before your fingers find the hem of his shirt, pushing it up and over his head, and he helps you get it off before crashing his mouth against yours again. Your hands roam over his bare chest, feeling the hard lines of muscle and the rapid beat of his heart under your fingertips. His skin is warm and slightly slick with sweat, and you canât resist scraping your nails lightly down his abdomen just to feel him shiver.
He bites down on your lower lip in retaliation, and you gasp into his mouth. It earns you a low chuckle. Youâre about to shoot back with something sarcastic when his hands slide up to cup your breasts again, rolling your nipples between his fingers, and your retort dies in your throat.
âThought you were gonna give me attitude,â he murmurs against your mouth, lips curving into a cocky grin. âGuess you can be good when you want to.â
âShut up,â you breathe out, but your voice comes out shaky. He laughs softly, bending down to take one of your nipples into his mouth, sucking and flicking his tongue over the sensitive bud. Your hands fly back to his hair, fingers twisting in the strands, and he groans the tug.
Your hips buck against his, and he grinds back without hesitation, the hard line of his cock rubbing against your thigh through his jeans. You can feel just how badly he wants you; the thought sends another wave of heat flooding through your veins. You tug at his hair hard enough to make him look up at you, his lips red and swollen.
âQuit teasing,â you pant. Mydeiâs eyes flash with something dark and hungry.
He doesnât bother replyingâjust scoops you up effortlessly, wrapping your legs around his waist. His mouth is back on yours, demanding, and you feel him fumbling with his belt between your bodies. You donât have the patience to wait, so you reach down to help him, your hands brushing against his as you yank the buckle open and shove his jeans and briefs down just enough to free his cock.
He groans in relief when your hand wraps around his cock, stroking it slowly and spreading his pre-cum across the length. He bites back a curse. His hands tighten on your thighs, and you donât miss the way his muscles tense under your touch. You give him a little smirk, but it falters when he presses his tip against your entrance, not quite pushing in yet.
âAre you sure?â he asks, eyes roaming over your face.
You roll your eyes, grabbing his face and pulling him down into a bruising kiss. âIf you donât fuck me right now, I swearââ
You donât get to finish because he thrusts into you all at once, knocking the breath out of your lungs. Your head tips back against the wall, and Mydei buries his face in the crook of your neck, groaning against your skin as he adjusts to the tight warmth of your cunt. His breath is hot and ragged, each exhale brushing against your collarbone. His fingers dig into your thighs.
âFuck,â he rasps, voice rough and strained. His hips pull back just enough to drag his length almost completely out before he slams back in, his pace brutal from the start. The force of it makes your back scrape against the wall, and you can feel every inch of himâthick and girthy, splitting you open in a way that has your body straining towards him.
Your hands scrabble for purchase, nails leaving crescents on his shoulders as he sets a relentless rhythm, each thrust hitting deep and perfect. Youâre clinging to him, your legs tightening around his waist as he drives into you. The wet, obscene sounds of your skin against skin echo through the room, mingling with your breathless mons and his low groans.
âFuckâso tight,â he mutters against your skin, his mouth dragging along your throat, teeth scraping and biting hard enough to leave a slight stinging in their wake. âYou feel so fucking good. Sâlike you were made for me.â
You whimper, your hips rocking against his instinctively, desperate for more. You canât stop yourself from moaning his name shakily. It spurs him on. He grins against your neck, pressing a sloppy kiss to your pulse point before sucking a bruise into your skin.
âYeah? That good, huh?â he taunts, his tone mocking but laced with genuine awe. One of his hands slides from your waist to cup your breast, squeezing just enough to make you gasp. His thumb grazes over your nipple, and the sensation has your back arching off the wall, pushing your chest further into his hand.
Your head is spinning, pleasure coiling tight and hot in your belly as he fucks into you hard. You can feel every ride and vein dragging against your walls, every thrust forcing sounds out of you that you didnât even know you could make.
His mouth finds yours again; his teeth nip at your bottom lip before he slips his tongue inside. Youâre so lost in him, so overwhelmed, that it takes you a second to realise his other hand has slipped between your bodies, his fingers finding your clit and circling it with almost punishing pressure.
âFuckââ Your hands are back in his hair, tugging hard enough to make him hiss, but he doesnât let up, the rough pads of his fingers rubbing insistently as his cock drives into you again and again. âI canâtâfuck, Iâmââ
âGonna come again?â he growls against your mouth, his pace never faltering. âYouâre gonna come all over my cock, arenât you? Thatâs it. Good girl.â
His words make your thighs clench. Your climax comes over you without warning, tearing a strangled cry from your throat. Your walls clench around him, pulsing and fluttering as pleasure blazes through every nerve ending. You feel your thighs trembling where theyâre locked around his waist.
Mydei doesnât slow down; he just keeps fucking you through it, each thrust coaxing another wave of sensation that leaves you gasping and boneless in his grip. Your mind is a haze, barely able to process how good it feels to be taken like this. Youâre dimly aware of his breathing getting rougher, his hips stuttering as your body milks him.
You drag his face back to yours, capturing his lips in a desperate, messy kiss, biting until you taste copper. He groans into you. You feel him shudder just before his rhythm falters. With one last, deep snap of his hips, he buries his cock inside you, spilling hot and thick as his body shakes with the force of his release.
His forehead presses against yours as he catches his breath, both of you panting and trembling. He stays inside you, like heâs not quite ready to let you go, his hands sliding up your sides to hold you close. Youâre still reeling, your pulse racing, but you manage a small, satisfied smile, brushing your lips over his with a gentleness that almost feels out of place after what just happened.
For a long moment, neither of you moveâyou just breathe each other in, letting the remnants of pleasure tangle in the space between you. Finally, he pulls back enough to meet your gaze, his thumb brushing over your swollen lower lip.
âStill think Iâm running my mouth?â you whisper, still trying to muster some semblance of defiance.
Mydei simply nudges his nose against yours. âMaybe,â he says, a little bit hoarse, âbut at least I finally shut you up.â
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âChrysos Heirs: The Reunion Tour â Behind the Music. Episode Two.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: CASTORICE, sitting on a stool.]
CASTORICE: You want to know about the relationships? (Grins) Oh, man. Itâs like a dysfunctional family reunion. Some of us slipped right back into old habits, and some of us⊠well, itâs complicated. Mydei and _____? (Snorts) Donât even get me started. You can feel the tension from three rooms away.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, sitting cross-legged on the floor.]
HYACINE: Thereâs definitely still some⊠uh, unresolved stuff. We used to be so tight. All of us. I mean, we fought, sure, but weâd always make up eventually. Now? I donât know. Itâs like everyoneâs got their guard up. Phainonâs doing his best to keep things light, Castorice just barrels through any tension like she doesnât notice, but Mydei and _____⊠(Pauses) Itâs like walking on eggshells around them.
[CUT TO: PHAINON, leaning back against the wall with his guitar across his lap.]
PHAINON: I think everyone kind of forgot how to be around each other. We spent years being everything to one anotherâfriends, family, bandmates, rivals. When the band split, it wasnât just the music that fell apart. It was us. Now itâs like⊠weâre all trying to figure out where we stand again. The way Castorice and Hyacine laugh like nothingâs changed, while Mydei and _____ act like theyâre on opposite sides of a war zone. Itâs exhausting.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, still slouched on a couch with his arms crossed.]
MYDEI: Iâm not gonna sit here and pretend everythingâs fine. Itâs not. The band breaking up after I left? Iâm sure that wasnât just some decision they made over drinks. Castorice acts like weâre one big happy family again, but she knows itâs not that simple. Phainonâs always the peacemaker, trying to smooth everything over, but that just makes it worse sometimes. I donât know.
[CUT TO: YOU, sitting on a folding chair.]
YOU: Itâs frustrating. We used to be so close. All of us. And now it feels like every word has teeth. Castorice is trying so hard to keep us from falling apart again, and Hyacineâs just⊠tired. Phainonâs stuck playing mediator, and Mydeiâ(shakes head)âhe still looks at me like itâs probably my fault. Maybe it is. But it wasnât just me who made it boil down to this.
[CUT TO: CASTORICE AGAIN, balancing her drumsticks on her finger.]
CASTORICE: Weâve always been a mess. Thatâs kind of our thing. But it used to be that we were messy together. Now it feels like weâre just trying not to accidentally set each other off. I miss how easy it used to be. Back when Mydei and _____ could actually talk without biting each otherâs heads off. Back when Hyacine would just crack a joke instead of staying quiet.
[CUT TO: HYACINE AGAIN, resting her chin on her hand.]
HYACINE: Sometimes it feels like weâre playing pretend. Like weâre trying to convince ourselves that weâre still friends when weâre really just⊠people who used to know each other. Cas keeps pushing for us to hang out after shows, but it never feels right. Everyoneâs just waiting for someone to break the silence. I donât know. Maybe itâll get better once weâve been on the road for longer.
[CUT TO: PHAINON AGAIN, eyes thoughtful as he fiddles with his guitar strap.]
PHAINON: I think everyoneâs just afraid to be the one who cares the most. Back in the day, we knew each other better than anyone else did. Now, itâs like weâre scared of stepping on each otherâs wounds. Mydeiâs carrying too much pride to apologise, and _____ is too stubborn to forgive. Castorice and Hyacine just want everyone to get alone, but no oneâs talking about the elephant in the room. Weâre good at pretending on stage, though. Real good.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, his jaw clenched, his eyes hard.]
MYDEI: You donât just come back from something like that. You donât go from being everything to each other to nothing without it leaving a scar. Iâm not saying itâs all her fault. (Hesitates) Iâm just saying that itâs easier to be mad than to admit I mightâve messed up, too. Thatâs why I keep my distance. Itâs just⊠easier that way.
[CUT TO: YOU, looking almost weary.]
YOU: I never thought it would feel this hollow. I donât know what I expectedâa clean slate, maybe? But it doesnât work like that. Weâre still carrying the past with us, and itâs dragging us down. I guess⊠I just wish heâd talk to me. Even if itâs to say he hates me. At least that would be something.
[CUT TO: CASTORICE, shrugging with a half-smile.]
CASTORICE: Whatever happens, Iâm not giving up. Weâre stuck with each other. Thatâs just how it is. Even if we have to scream it out or throw things at each other, weâre gonna make it work. Because the way they look at each other sometimes? Thereâs still something there. They just gotta get over themselves long enough to see it.
[CUT TO: PHAINON, adjusting his guitar.]
PHAINON: Theyâll figure it out. Weâre not just a bandâweâre more than that. And sometimes, being more means we break and put ourselves back together. Weâll get there.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, giving a faint smile.]
HYACINE: If we can just stop letting the past dictate everything, maybe we can start being friends again. Maybe more. I donât know. But I do know thisâon stage, weâre still the same. Maybe the music will help us remember how to be us again.
v). so i write him all these letters and i throw them in the trash.
When you stir in your sleep, the mattress beside you is cold.Â
Itâs lateâpast midnight, probably. Your stomach grumbles; you sit up and shuffle tiredly over to the mini-bar and grab a bag of salted cashew nuts, tearing it open. Thereâs no trace of Mydei. Itâs as if he was never here, didnât fuck you against the wall like it was all he could think of, didnât lay down on the bed next to you and curl a strong arm around your waist.
You wish you could say you were just disappointed. The truth is, you had expected nothing else, but disappointment still curls around your ribs.
Itâs stupid. You walk over to the glass table placed in front of the plush armchair towards the side of your bed. Thereâs a notepad and a slightly blunt pencil placed on top of it. You sink into the armchair, popping a handful of cashew nuts into your mouth and chewing.Â
The words should be flowing by nowâanger and frustration always make for good materialâbut tonight, theyâre stuck somewhere between your ribs, buried under the feeling of his mouth on your skin.
It shouldnât feel like this. You knew what you were getting into. You knew better than to expect anything else from him. But the way he kissed you, like he was trying to make you forget every fightâmade your chest ache. Youâre not surprised that heâs gone. Youâre not even hurt, really. Just angry. Angry at him for leaving without a word, angry at yourself for caring that he did. You shove a few more cashews into your mouth and wipe your fingers on your sweatpants before picking up the pencil.
Your hand moves almost without thinking, words scrawling across the page faster than you can catch up with them.
You look at me like Iâm your only song, And I play the part even when it feels wrong. Weâre always dancing on the edge of a goodbye, But Iâd risk the fall just to feel you by my side.
You pause, glaring at the lyrics. You should throw the notepad across the room, rip the page out, crush it in your fist. Instead, you just sit there, tapping the pencil against your knee. You can still feel the way his mouth moved against yours, the bruising grip of his hands on your hips. You take a shaky breath and force yourself to keep writing. Itâs better than sitting here drowning in the memory of him.
Weâre tangled and twisted and never the same, We love like it hurts and kiss through the pain. Youâre poison and honey and everything wrong, And I hate that youâre still the one I want.
The pencil scrapes harshly against the paper as you press harder than you mean to. The words taste bitter in your mouth, but at least theyâre honest. Maybe thatâs why itâs so hard to write them downâbecause admitting that you want more than just his hands on you feels like exposing a wound youâve been pretending doesnât exist.
You swallow down the knot in your throat and lean back, squeezing your eyes shut. It would almost be easier if you hated him. If you could just shove him out of your head and pretend he was nothing more than a bad decision. But itâs not that simple. You donât just want him; you want the old him, the one who used to light up when you walked into the room, who teased you until you were laughing so hard you couldnât breathe. You want the Mydei who didnât always look at you like youâre a problem he canât fix.
You know youâre being unfair. Heâs not the only one whoâs changed. Youâre not the same eitherâtoo guarded, too tired. Sometimes you wonder if youâre just setting yourself up for disappointment because itâs easier than admitting you still love him.
Your chest aches, and the next words come almost like a confession.
You look at me like Iâm the one youâve been missing, Kiss me like Iâm the dream you keep wishing Would come true when the lights fade awayâ But you never stay.
You finish the verse and set the pencil down, pressing your fingertips to your lips like you can still taste him there.
You told yourself you wouldnât do this again. But he looked at you tonight like he was starvingâlike you were something he couldnât resist. And you let him have you because a part of you needed it, too. Needed to feel wanted, even if it was just for a few hours. Even if he was gone before you woke up.
You shove the notepad away, letting it fall to the floor as you curl up in the armchair, knees pulled to your chest. The song lingers in your head, the lyrics clawing at your heart. You feel ridiculous for letting him get under your skin like this, like a bruise that wonât heal.
The truth is, youâd let him hurt you a thousand times if it meant heâd look at you like that again. Like youâre the only thing keeping him alive. Maybe that makes you a fool, but you donât know how to be anything else when it comes to him.
Shaking your head as though to dissolve it of its thoughts, you tear out the sheet of paper with your lyrics on it, fold it into a square hastily, and shove it inside the pocket of your sweatpants. You stand up and grab your lighter from your bag. You need a smoke.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âThe Foundersâ Cut.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: YOU, sitting on a simple black stool, hands loosely clasped in your lap.]
YOU: Writing with Mydei⊠God, it used to be so easy. We didnât have to think about it. (Smiles softly) Weâd just be sitting on the floor of his shitty apartmentâbarely any furniture, just the couch his neighbour was gonna throw out and that one rug we stole from Hyacineâs place. One of us would pick up the guitar, start playing something, and it was like everything else just faded out.
INTERVIEWER (off-screen): Was it always that natural?
YOU: (Nods) Yeah. It just worked. Sometimes we didnât even talk before starting a song. Iâd be on the floor, writing down whatever came to mind, and heâd be next to me, leaning against the wall with his guitar. Sometimes Iâd hum something, and heâd justâpick it up. It was like we were reading each otherâs minds.
[CUT TO: MYDEI, sitting with his back slightly hunched, elbows on his knees.]
MYDEI: We wrote some of our best songs at 3 A.M, dead tired, arguing about lyrics while eating instant ramen. Sheâd always overthink the wordsâhad to make sure they said exactly what she wanted. I didnât care as much. I guess I figured the feeling mattered more than getting every word right.
INTERVIEWER: Do you have an example for the same?
MYDEI: There was this one song (pauses, shakes his head). We wrote it after this stupid fight. Iâd stormed out, pissed as hell, but when I came back, she was sitting on the floor, scribbling lyrics like her life depended on it. I didnât say anything. Just sat down and played along with whatever she was humming. Neither of us apologised, but⊠I guess that was our way of making up.
[CUT TO: YOU]
YOU: We never talked about it, you know? Weâd write all these songs that were practically confessionsâabout each other, about how much it hurt when we fought, or how we couldnât stand being apartâand then weâd just⊠move on. Never acknowledged it.
INTERVIEWER: Do you regret that?
YOU: (Hesitates) Sometimes. But the songs made it pretty obvious. We were practically begging each other to figure it out without actually saying it.
[CUT TO: MYDEI]
MYDEI: She always wrote like it was her way of⊠bleeding out whatever she couldnât say. We made something good out of it, though. Even if we never said it out loud. And⊠yeah. Sometimes I miss that. The simplicity of it. Just us and a guitar and whatever shit we were working through. I didnât need anything else back then.
[CUT TO: YOU]
YOU: Itâs funny. We used to write about heartbreak like it was this distant conceptâsomething that happened to other people. Never thought weâd end up writing about each other.
vi). i want to get him back (and then?)
The rooftop is quiet at this hourâtoo early for most and too late for the rest. The sky is more navy than blue, more shadow than light. You push the heavy metal door open with your shoulder, and it clicks shut behind you with a soft thud. You tug your hoodie tighter around you, retreating into the warmth, and dig around in your pocket for your cigarettes.
The lighter sparks on the second try. You inhale. Smoke fills your lungs, and something in you loosens. You hate how easy it still is to find comfort in bad habits.
Thatâs when you notice him.
At first, itâs just the faint glow of a cigarette at the far corner of the rooftop. But you know itâs himâknow it in the shape of his silhouette, the way he leans forward with one elbow braced on the ledge, hoodie pulled low over his face. Mydei. Of course.
You hesitate for a beat, frozen halfway between the door and where he stands. It would be easier to leaveâpretend you didnât see him, pretend you didnât spend the night tangled up in him and then wake up to cold sheets and silence.
But you donât.
Your steps are quiet as you cross the rooftop, stopping a few feet away from him. He doesnât look at you, just exhales slowly, eyes on the horizon. You take a drag from your cigarette, watching the tip burn orange, watching the smoke curl upwards and vanish into the sky.
âWhyâd you leave?â you ask. You mean the hotel room, but not only that.
Heâs quiet for a long time. You wonder if heâs even going to answer.
âI didnât want to wake you,â he says eventually, still not looking at you.
You huff a breath. Itâs not quite a laugh. âYou didnât want to be there.â
He doesnât argue. The silence stretches again, but itâs not uncomfortable. Just tired. He glances at you. The wind picks up a little, brushing your hair across your cheek. He noticesâalways noticesâand shifts just slightly so heâs blocking the breeze. Neither of you says anything about it.
âYou looked peaceful,â Mydei says. âI didnât want to mess it up.â
âYou think not being there was better?â
âI didnât know what to say.â
You nod. You donât push. Youâve learned not to with him. âItâs not just about tonight,â you say quietly.
He nods, eyes dark and shadowed. âI know.â
The sun starts to edge over the horizon, painting faint streaks of pink and orange across the navy sky. Itâs beautiful in that fragile, fleeting way, like something youâre scared to touch because you know itâs too delicate to last. You both watch in silence for a while, letting the smoke and the light fill the air between you. Thereâs a comfort in it, strangely enough. The way the world keeps turning even when your heart feels like itâs stuck. The way mornings come anyway.
You look at Mydei again.
Heâs tired. You can see it in the curve of his mouth, in the slump of his shoulders. But heâs here. Part of you wants to ask him why. Why he came up here. Why he didnât leave the hotel entirely. Why he lets himself touch you but wonât let himself stay. Instead, you say nothing.
He offers you his lighter when yours gives out, and your fingers brush when you take it. Itâs a brief touch, barely there, but itâs enough to make your chest ache in that too-familiar way.
You smoke the rest of your cigarettes side by side, not speaking, not needing to. Itâs the kind of silence that used to exist between songs in the studio. When you stub the last bit out on the ledge, you take one last look at the sunrise. The light catches on his face now, gold and soft, and you want to say something. You donât even know what.
So instead, you pull your hoodie tighter and nod. âI should go.â
He nods too, but he doesnât move. Doesnât stop you either.
You turn back towards the door, and as you do, a folded piece of paper slips from your pocket. You donât notice it fall, fluttering once before landing gently near his feet. You donât notice it, because youâre too busy disappearing back into the stairwell, too wrapped up in keeping your shoulders straight and your breathing steady.
He doesnât move for a while after youâre gone.
Then, slowly, Mydei leans down and picks up the paper. The handwriting is unmistakableâyour quick, slanted script, a few smudges where the pencil dragged.
He reads it once. Twice.
Then he folds it back up, holds it in his hand like it might crumble, and watches the sun break over the city, alone.
The lights shift from the vibrant spotlights of the previous set into something softer, slowerâdimmed gold and dusky purple spreading like ink over the stage. Your mic is cold under your fingers. You roll the cord absently through your hand. You canât see much beyond the footlights; only the sea of shadows, the faint outlines of swaying arms and cell phone lights blinking like stars.
But Mydeiâs there, across from you. This next song is just you and him, after all.
Heâs adjusting the strap of his guitar, head bowed, eyes hidden beneath the fall of his hair.
Itâs the same stage. The same lights. The same song. Why does it feel so different?
The crowd doesnât know what theyâre about to hear. Most of them donât even know the song, youâre pretty sure. Itâs some B-side from one of your earlier albums. You remember when you wrote it. The quiet of three in the morning, the late-night arguments that bled into music, the unraveling of two people who couldnât speak to each other unless it was in chords and half-rhymed lines.
Here you are again. Older. Worse at pretending.
The intro begins with gentle chords, the kind that hurt more than they soothe. Your mic is already at your lips. You inhale like itâs your first breath of the night.
âI told myself I wouldnât care this time, Said your name like it didnât still taste like goodbye. But you look at me like you never learned how to let goâŠâ
Your voice holds, though it feels like walking a tightrope. Every word comes out measured, like if you let it slip, your heart will come out tumbling too. You donât look at him, not yet. You can feel his presenceâlike gravityâbut you donât turn your head.
Not until he sings. Then, you do. He meets your gaze.
âI said we were fire meant to burn out fast, But I keep finding you in every song Iâve written last. You donât ask me to stay, and I donât ask you to try⊠But weâre still standing here, pretending weâre fine.â
His voiceâGod, his voice. Itâs rougher than it used to be, edges carved by years and distance, but it still wraps around your lyrics like it was always meant to. Heâs not just singing. Heâs looking at you like heâs saying every word for the first time. It knocks the air from your lungs.
Your heartâs pounding now, and you hate that it still reacts to him like this. Like your body remembers the way he used to hold you when no one else was watching.Â
The chorus crashes over both of you.
âSo lie to me, baby, say itâs still love, Say the ending never mattered, that this beginningâs enough. We were smoke, we were stars, we were doomed from the start, But tonight, just tonight, sing like you still mean every part.â
Mydei steps closer. You do, too. Itâs instinct, not plan. You donât even realise it until youâre nearly toe-to-toe, voices tangling into harmony, eyes locked.
You wonder if the crowd can feel it. If they can hear the way your throat tightens, how the vowels tremble when he looks at you like that. Like heâs trying to remember the shape of youânot just your face, but your soul. The bridge comes. You always dreaded it.
âMaybe weâll break like we always do, Maybe weâll forget this in the morning too. But for nowâGod, for nowâ You still feel like a home I never knew.â
The line lands like a punch to the chest. Yours, and maybe his too.
You let it ring out, raw and full. For a second, it feels like the two of you are back in that tiny studio years agoâbarefoot, angry, tired, in love. Writing a song you were both too scared to mean. But you meant it. You always did, and you do now.
The last chorus is quieter, a lullaby instead of a plea.
âAnd Iâd sing this with you a thousand times⊠if youâd let me.â
You drop your hand from the mic, breath catching in your throat, and for a momentâjust a momentâthereâs silence. Just you and Mydei.
He doesnât move. Heâs staring at you with something unspoken lodged in his eyes, something that looks too close to regret.
You turn away first. Your heartâs already too full. One more second and it might burst.
The crowd roars behind you, applause crashing in waves.
[CUT TO BLACK SCREEN] Text appears on screen: âThe Membersâ Cut.â
[INT. STUDIO â DOCUMENTARY INTERVIEW SETUP]
[CUT TO: CASTORICE, lounging back on the couch.]
CASTORICE: It was just a fact. Mydei and _____. You didnât say one name without the other. (Shakes her head) And the way they used to look at each other on stage? Insane. Like, weâd be in the middle of a song, and Iâd be watching them instead of playing because damn. The rest of us couldâve vanished into thin air, and they wouldnât have noticed.
(Laughs lightly, rolling her eyes.)
CASTORICE (CONTâD): It was kinda funny, actually. Like, okay, we get it, youâre in love. Can we get through the set without you two making heart eyes at each other? (Pause) But, yâknow⊠it was also kinda nice. Seeing people that in sync. That kind of connection isnât something you fake.
[CUT TO: HYACINE, sitting cross-legged on the floor, bass resting on her lap.]
HYACINE: They were disgusting. I mean that in the nicest way possible. (Grinning) Like, youâd be tuning your guitar, and theyâd just be standing off to the side, whispering to each other like they werenât literally about to perform in front of thousands of people. And yeah, sure, couples sing duets all the time, but with them? It was different. Like they were letting us in on something private, something meant just for them. Even if it was a song theyâd performed a hundred times before, it always felt like they were saying something new.
(Chuckles, eyes soft with nostalgia.)
HYACINE (CONTâD): They made you believe in that kind of love, yâknow? The all-consuming, this-song-is-about-you kind of love. You couldnât want them and not feel it.
[CUT TO: PHAINON, sitting with his arms draped over the back of the chair, smirking lightly.]
PHAINON: Yeah, they were that couple. The ones who made you roll your eyes but also kind of wish you had what they had. Like, I remember this one showâMydei had just finished this crazy guitar solo, and instead of, I donât know, reveling in the applause like a normal person, he immediately turned to _____ like she was the only one whose reaction mattered. And she just grinned at him, and I swear to God, he looked like he won the lottery.
(Shakes his head and scoffs.)
PHAINON (CONTâD): They were reckless with it. Loud about it. No hesitation, no holding back. They didnât just love each other, they showed it. And thatâs rare. You donât get that kind of honesty on stage very often.
(His smirk fades just slightly.)
PHAINON (CONTâD):  âŠThatâs why it was so hard when it ended.
vii). âcause i miss the way he kisses and the way he made me laugh.
The crowd is louder tonight. Not louder in volume, necessarily, but just⊠like theyâre expecting something. Like they know something you donât.
You glance at the setlist as someone does your in-ear check. Your duet with Mydei is coming up nextâthe same one youâve done every night for years. Itâs not your most popular song, but itâs yours. It always has been. Something about it felt safe even now, when everything else between you and him was held together with duct tape and willpower.
You take a sip of water and step towards the side of the stage, waiting for the intro cues.
But when you hear the first notes, theyâre not yours.
Your stomach drops. The chord progression is soft, a little unfamiliar. Itâs not one of your tracks, or a part of the agreed setlist.
Your gaze snapes to the center of the stage where Mydei standsâguitar in hand, face calm. Heâs adjusted his mic, and heâs⊠smiling? Not a grin. Nothing cocky. Just this small, quiet thing, like heâs doing something that matters to him more than heâs ready to admit.
âThis oneâs not on the list,â he says into the mic, casual, like this doesnât upend everything. âI wanted to try something new tonight.â
Your brow furrows. You step a little closer, careful not to draw a scene. Castorice gives you a sharp look from behind her kit, like, Did you know about this? You shake your head once.Â
Mydei starts to sing.
âYou look at me like Iâm your only song, And I play the part even when it feels wrong.â
It hits you like a punch to the ribs.
That lyric. That exact line. You know it because you wrote it, alone. In that hotel room weeks ago, scrawled in a burst of emotion you werenât proud of, folded up and shoved into the pocket of your sweatpants. Youâd thought it got tossed in the wash or lost somewhere in the shuffle between cities.
Apparently not. Apparently he found it. And instead of asking youâlike a normal person wouldâhe set it to music. He built a melody around your bleeding heart and decided to sing it to a crowd of thousands.
âWeâre tangled and twisted and never the same, We love like it hurts and kiss through the pain. Youâre poison and honey and everything wrong, And I hate that youâre still the one I want.â
Itâs a beautiful melody, and you feel something inside your chest twist, hard. He sings softly but unsteadily, like he wasnât sure that youâd hear itâor worse, that you would.
He doesnât look at you while he sings. He scans the crowd, eyes on the horizon. But the meaning is clear. You can feel it in the tightness in your chest, in the hush thatâs fallen over the audience, like they know this isnât just a love song.
You fold your arms over your chest, more for grounding than anything. Castorice doesnât play a beat. Hyacine and Phainon watch silently, hands loose on their instruments like theyâre ready to jump in if needed, but they donât. Neither of you do.
This is his moment, and your words.
âYou look at me like Iâm the one youâve been missing, Kiss me like Iâm the dream you keep wishing Would come true when the lights fade awayâ But you never stay.â
You exhale shakily. You feel exposed, as if youâre standing naked in front of an entire arena. The words werenât just lyricsâthey were confessions. Grudges. Regrets. Things you never had the guts to say out loud. And here Mydei is, saying them for you.
No. Singing them.
Your fingers curl into your palms. You donât know whether to be furious or deeply, deeply moved.Â
He finishes the song in a whisper, almost. The last chord rings out like an unanswered question. The audience is silent for a beat too long. Then they eruptâwhistling, cheering, screaming. Itâs a standing ovation for something they didnât even know was a story.
And still, Mydei hasnât looked at youâuntil now.
He turns, finally, just a little, and meets your eyes across the stage. You donât smile. You donât clap. You just stare at him, speechless and conflicted.
Then, Mydei steps back from the mic and gives the signal to move on with the set. You turn your face away before the next lights come up, blinking hard. Your heartâs racing. You donât know what happens after this; what this means; what youâre supposed to say.
You only know one thing: That song was yours, and now, itâs his, too.
The hallway outside the dressing rooms is buzzingâcrew rushing around, the muffled roar of the crowd still seeping through the walls, someone shouting about cords and lights and encores. But all you can hear is the blood in your ears and your name echoing in Mydeiâs voice as he sang your lyrics.
His voice, but your words. Your heart on a scrap of paper you never meant for anyone else to see.
Your footsteps are harsh against the floor as you turn the corner and push the door open. The dressing room is too bright, too sterile compared to the intimacy of the stage. Mydei stands with his back to you, shirt clinging to his skin with sweat, hair pushed off his forehead like he ran his fingers through it too many times.
You close the door behind you with a click. Quiet, but final. He hears it.
âHey,â he says, not turning around yet.
You stare at the back of his head. âDonât do that to me.â
Mydei pauses. Slowly, he turns to face you. âI figured youâd be mad.â
âMad?â You laugh, breath catching somewhere in your throat. âYou think Iâm mad?â
âYou look mad.â
âI am mad,â you snap, taking a step closer, heart pounding. âYou sang a song you werenât supposed to have. You didnât even ask me, Mydei. You justâjust stood there and threw it at me in front of ten thousand people like it meant nothing.â
âIt didnât mean nothing,â he says. âThatâs why I sang it.â
Youâre both quiet. The silence stretches and tightens until itâs almost unbearable.
âYou couldâve told me,â you say finally, voice hoarse. âYou couldâve talked to me. About the song. About anything. But you donât. You never do.â
Mydei exhales slowly, resting his hands on his hips like heâs bracing himself. âI didnât know how.â
You tilt your head, lips parting in disbelief. âThatâs such bullshit, Mydei. We wrote songs together. We told each other everything through music. And now youâre justâstanding there, acting like itâs some impossible thing.â
He looks at you, then. Really looks. And for a moment, heâs not the cold, distant version of himself heâs been for months. Heâs just him. The boy who used to fall asleep beside you in the tour van. The one who hummed half-finished melodies in your ear at midnight in whatever motel you were crashing in. The one who used to kiss you like the world might end before morning.
âI didnât know how to say I missed you,â he admits. âSo I used your words instead. Because mine never come out right.â
You donât want to forgive him. You really donât.
But the hurt in his voice is real. So is the way heâs looking at youâlike youâve always been the only person in the room, and heâs just been waiting to see you again for real.
You take one shaky step forward. Then another.
When your lips crash into his, it isnât careful or slow. Itâs everything youâve been holding back: Rage, longing, grief, hope. His hands find your face, yours grip his shirt, and everything around you blurs until itâs just him, just the warmth of his mouth and the softness of his sighs and the undeniable truth that this still feels like home.
You part, breathless.
Neither of you speaks at first. Youâre still close enough to feel his breath on your cheek, the heat of his skin under your fingertips.Â
Your voice comes out quieter than you intend when you tell him, âI want to get you back.â
Mydei doesnât hesitate. âYou already have.â
It hits you harder than the kiss did. Something cracks inside youâsomething small and soft and long-buried. You almost donât realise youâre crying until he wipes your cheek with the back of his hand.
You let out a breath, something between a laugh and a sob. âIâm still mad at you.â
âI know.â His thumb traces the edge of your jaw. âYouâre allowed to be.â
You step back first, gently. He lets you go, but his eyes follow you like heâs afraid youâll vanish if he blinks.
As you adjust your jacket and run a hand through your hair, something slips from your pocketâfolded paper, creased from being handled too many times. You donât notice, but Mydei does.
He kneels to pick it up after youâre gone, quietly unfolding it to find another unfinished song. Lyrics in your handwriting. His name, half-crossed out and rewritten three times.
He reads the first line. Smiles.
He doesnât hand it back to you. He tucks it into his jacket, like he already knows how it ends.
[CUT TO BLACK] Text appears on screen: âChrysos Heirs: The Reunion Tour. THE END.â
âą a/n: as per usual, thank you to @lotusteabag for being my #1 cheerleader and supporter throughout the entire time i was writing this fic. thank you for reading & i hope you have a wonderful day!