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Spring with the burn of the Sun that gets lost in the wintry winds of the shade, the bloom of a million flowers from the cracked earth of the desolate days of the past, the renewal of life and spirit, the wandering feet changing paths enchanted by the bounty of nature, the hope that germinates from the ruins of past, the crunch of fallen yellow leaves beneath my boots, the green of budding leaves that dominate the pupil of the eye, the time for choosing between cold coffee (probable cold and cough) and hot lemon tea (probable burn of the throat), the joys of laying on the lawn with grass sticking to hoddies that would bid farewell soon (unless you're weird enough to wear 'em in summer cause HOODIES duh), the lazy lay in sun cause cats do have a lot in common with humans...


Myosotis sylvatica - ĐДзабŃĐŽĐșа лДŃĐœĐ°Ń. Forest forget-me-not.






ĐДзабŃĐŽĐșа лДŃĐœĐ°Ń (лаŃ. Myosotis sylvatica). Forest forget-me-not.
come see what flower you are bc while the world is dark u deserve to be told u are bright and beautifulÂ

Please forget me not
This took longer than expected to finish

Forget-me-not silk postcard.
I recently acquired this unusual postcard from the early 1900âČs. Itâs called a âFABâ Patchwork Card because it contains a silk patchwork square. The idea was to collect enough different designs to make a patchwork cushion or maybe a quilt with. It was manufactured by W. N. Sharpe of Bradford, England.
To remove the patch from the postcard you had to cut around the dotted line. There are many really lovely floral designs in this series. W. N. Sharpe produced many different series of cards - Edwardian actresses/personalities, views of London, heraldic crests etc.
Own scan from my own postcard..
I cannot ever forget you.
No Poison; No violence nor antidepressants could ever erase you from my mind.
You are not real but you were never a delusion. You are my comfort.
A fantasy.
One that has carried me through the miserable years of my youth.
Even when the storm passes and my vision returns,
Even when I have been abandoned by every other thought and memory,
You will always have a home in me.

- HB
Ahhhhhh!!! Yunho! Finally! Took you long enough! After all that heartbreak ahhh!!
Fate has always finds its way huh? Cause If it wasn't for Wooyoung and his bullying tendency, I don't think Yunho that dumbass would even know and realized what he had done although he doesn't fully know yet.
I am glad for Wooyoung and his big mouth đ sorry not sorry.
forget me not | iv



Pairing: Jeong Yunho x witch!Reader AU: non-idol | supernatural Summary: Yunho should be happy--he's got everything going for him and he's set to marry the love of his life! So why is he standing outside of your shop on the night of his engagement party? Word Count: 7.5K (my bad) Warnings: infidelity, use of the k word
Fic Masterlist
a/n: my stitches reopened and I had to go back and get restitched đŹ so I spent all day in bed editing this chapter. i love reading everyone's theories and feedback is always welcome!

The first time Haewon saw Yunho, it was at your dorm during a study session. You were both surrounded by books, notes, and various pieces of stationary scattered across the floor. While you were focusing on writing out your note cards, Haewon was dancing around the room in an attempt to âactivate her brain cellsâ.Â
She had been caught up in her own world until the sound of a knock interrupted her antics. You stood up to answer the door, and a low voice followed, mingled with a chuckleâdeep, familiar, and warm.
Yunho.
He was your best friend, someone sheâd heard about but hadnât paid much attention to. But that day, something was different. He sat with a pile of books and a look of quiet concentration that intrigued her. His presence was magnetic, though subtle, and without realizing it, Haewon found herself sneaking glances at him, captivated by the calm determination in his demeanor.
She wasnât sure when it happened exactly, but at some point, between stolen glances and shared laughter over late-night group study sessions, she started to fall for him. Yunho was kind, always the first to offer a helping hand, and his dedication to his friends and family was unwavering. He had a way of making everyone feel valued and heard.
And when he asked her to be his girlfriend, she was over the moon.Â
"Did you know Yunho was going to ask me out?" she beamed, her voice laced with an excitement that made your heart sink.
You froze for a second, your pencil hovering above the page. There was a flicker of somethingâdisappointment, maybe even hurtâbut you quickly swallowed it down.Â
"Maybe," you muttered, your voice light, almost teasing, though it took everything in you to keep it that way. Haewon didnât see the way your grip tightened on the pencil, or how your smile didnât quite reach your eyes.
"I canât believe it," she gushed, oblivious to the turmoil behind your composed expression. "I mean, Iâve liked him for a while now, and I wasnât sure if he felt the same way, but when he asked meâŠGod, it was perfect."
"Thatâs great, Haewon" you said, your voice quieter than before, trying desperately to sound convincing.Â
You fell in love with the way Yunho truly saw you, even when you tried to hide parts of yourself. He understood you in ways no one else ever had, knowing your fears, your dreams, and all the things that made you tick. Somewhere along the line, you stopped worrying about what he would think of you because with Yunho, you never had to pretend.
Thatâs when you knew you loved himâbecause the idea of life without him didnât feel like life at all.
But how could you tell him? You werenât like Haewonâbold and unafraid, able to voice her feelings as if vulnerability wasnât terrifying. She was all confidence and ease, speaking her mind without a second thought, while you were cautious, overthinking, content to blend into the background.
Telling Yunho how you felt would mean stepping into the unknown. You couldnât bear the thought of losing him if things went wrong. So you stayed silent, burying your feelings deep, hoping that somehow, you could protect what you had by keeping your secret.Â
But things went wrong anyway.
You tried not to not let their relationship affect you, told yourself you were happy for them. Haewon and Yunho were two of the most important people in your life, and they deserved happiness. You repeated that to yourself like a mantra, hoping that if you said it enough, you might actually believe it.Â
It hurt seeing them together, knowing that while you were happy for them, you couldnât help the ache in your chest every time Yunho laughed a little too easily at something she said, or when she rested her head on his shoulder like it was the most natural thing in the world.
The worst part was that you couldnât even be angry. How could you? Haewon hadnât done anything wrong; she hadnât stolen Yunho from you, and Yunho hadnât abandoned you. It was like watching sand slip through your fingersânothing to hold on to, nothing you could do to stop it.
Yunho was happy, and you cared about him enough to want that for him, even if it wasnât with you.
After you disappeared, everything fell apart in ways neither of them expected. Yunho and Haewon participated in search parties, posted on social media about your disappearance, and cooperated with law enforcement. But there were no answers, no trace of where youâd gone or why. The emptiness you left behind was palpable, a gaping hole in both their lives.
At first, Haewon believed they were grieving together. She felt the weight of your absence in every corner of her life, and Yunho, in his quiet way, did too. But then, she began to notice the way their relationship shifted.Â
It was subtle at first: a slight distance in Yunhoâs eyes, the way he seemed preoccupied even when they were alone. He would zone out in the middle of conversations, and even when he held Haewon in his arms, his heart wasnât fully there.Â
Slowly, painfully, she realized the truth. Yunho wasnât just mourning youâhe was waiting for you. He was still tethered to you, pulled by an invisible force that Haewon couldnât compete with.
She never considered herself a mean girl. Sure, she had grown up in a comfortable world, surrounded by friends who were a little more tightly wounded and concerned with appearances. But now, standing on the other side of it, Haewon could see the truth for what it was. Yunho was never really hers to begin with. She hadnât stolen himânot intentionallyâbut she had taken something that was never really hers to claim.Â
Then there was Sungjae.Â
Sungjae had never been a close friend, not really. He was more of a background figureâsomeone on the outskirts of Haewonâs social circle who, little by little, had weaseled his way in. He was everything Yunho wasnât: impulsive, flirtatious, unpredictable. And it was those very qualities that ignited something in her.
The affair began quietly, like a secret Haewon wasnât ready to admit even to herself. It started innocently enoughâcasual conversations, coffee outings after shared classes. Theyâd stay up late in the library, long after everyone else had left, talking about things that felt too personal, too vulnerable to share with anyone else. Haewon convinced herself it was nothing more than a close friendshipâafter all, she had a large circle of friends. What harm could one more friend do?
As time passed, the line between friendship and something more blurred. In the quiet moments following your disappearance, Haewon found herself relying on Sungjae in ways she hadnât with Yunho in years. He became her anchor when the world felt uncertain, someone who made her feel alive and seen.
At first, it was easy to justify: she and Yunho had been drifting apart. Haewon had noticed it in the way their conversations had become shorter, less meaningful; the way they sat together in silence more often than not, the air between them filled with unspoken tension.Â
But there was also something darker about Sungjaeâsomething tied to the past Haewon desperately tried to forget. The night you disappeared, Sungjae had humiliated you, his cruel words cutting through the air as everyone watched in uncomfortable silence. And Haewon had stood by, doing nothing. She had stayed silent, too afraid to confront him, too indifferent to speak up.
Yunho had done nothing, either. His usual kind, gentle demeanor had turned into passive inaction, making excuses whenever Haewon brought up the topic like "It's just a phase" or "Theyâll work it out."
âDo you think Sungjae had something to do with Y/Nâs disappearance?â Haewon suddenly blurted out as the two were cooking dinner.Â
Yunho froze, his jaw tightening. He knew the answerâhe had always known. The last time anyone had seen you was when you stormed out of the apartment, cheeks flushed with shame and frustration. And yet, Yunho couldnât admit it out loud. Admitting that Sungjae was responsible meant confronting his own failure, his own role in pushing you away.
âIf he did,â Yunho said, his voice low, a dangerous edge creeping in, âIâll kill him myself.â
âBut you were the last one who saw her.â
His entire body tensed, the weight of Haewonâs accusation hitting him harder than he expected. He turned to face her fully, eyes dark and cold.
âYou think I had something to do with Y/Nâs disappearance?â His voice was low, hurt and anger threading through each word. He could feel the bile rising in his chest, burning with the injustice of her suspicion.
âThatâs not what I saidââ
âBut itâs what you meant.â Yunho cut her off. âYou think Iâm the reason sheâs gone?â
âIâm just trying to figure out what happened,â she murmured, her voice softer now, though the accusation still lingered between them.Â
âAll I did was walk her out, and the CCTV proved that! You have no idea how much Y/Nâs disappearance is affecting me! But to even suggest that I couldâve done somethingâŠâ His voice trailed off, swallowed by a surge of emotion.
âI canât do this,â Yunho muttered, his voice barely audible now as he turned away from her. Grabbing his jacket off the chair, he headed for the door, his movements tense and deliberate. âIâm done with this conversation.â
His footsteps faltered just before reaching the door, the frustration inside him boiling over. He spun back to face Haewon, his voice sharp and biting.
âEvery time it comes to Sungjae, you choose him. Why?â
âIââ Haewonâs voice cracked, but Yunho didnât stop. The door clicked shut behind him, leaving a deafening silence in his wake.
Haewon knew it wasnât fair to keep dragging him along when her heart was no longer fully his. But the thought of actually leavingâthe finality of itâterrified her. The knowledge that once she walked away, there would be no going back was something she wasnât sure she could handle.
And then Yunho proposed.Â
It caught her completely off guardâa moment she hadnât prepared for despite all her doubts and uncertainty. She hadnât expected him to propose, not now. But instead of facing the truth, instead of admitting that her heart had drifted away and she was entangled in an affair with someone else, Haewon did the only thing she could think of: she convinced herself that accepting Yunhoâs proposal would fix everything.
Haewon felt trapped. She felt the walls closing in, suffocating her as she tried to play the part of the happy fiancĂ©e. On the night of the engagement party, everyone around them was celebrating, toasting to their future, but all she could think about was how wrong it all felt. Her heart wasnât in itânot fullyâand she knew it.
The alcohol didnât help. Glass after glass, Haewon drank to drown out the noise in her head, to silence the guilt and doubt. She wanted to forget, to numb herself to everything, but instead, it only made her feel more exposed.
She avoided Yunho most of the night, choosing instead to party with her friends, laughing too loudly, her smile brittle around the edges. Yunho tried to get her to slow down, to pull her back to him, to hold her close, but every time he did, it felt like the air was being sucked out of her lungs. It wasnât his fault, but being near him only made the weight of her choices heavier.
Finally, something inside her snapped. Right there, in front of everyone. The frustration, the guilt, the suffocating pressure of pretendingâit all came to the surface. She knew it was unfair, that Yunho didnât deserve it, but she couldnât stop the words from spilling out.Â
Now, as she laid in bed next to Sungjae, the weight of her betrayal closed in on her. The wedding was fast approaching, a date circled on the calendar like a death sentence, and there was no backing out now. The dress had been chosen, the invitations sent. Everyone was expecting a celebration, but all Haewon could feel was dread.Â
Yunho had betrayed you too, hadnât he? He had stood on the sidelines, just as complicit, watching as Sungjaeâs cruelty unraveled you. And yet, he had stayedâstayed with her, proposed to her, tried to build a future with her. It was laughable.Â
The two of them, pretending like they could escape what theyâd done, like they could forge something real out of ashes. But the truth had always been there, lurking beneath the surface.Â
They were no better than the man lying next to her now.
Perhaps this was what she and Yunho both deservedâtwo people who had betrayed you, condemned to a life of misery together.

Life in the Emporium was nothing short of magical surprises.
Each day began with a quiet ritual, a moment of calm before the shop's unique energy fully awoke. The first thing youâd do each morning was reach for the incenseâcarefully selected for its cleansing propertiesâand light it. As the fragrant smoke curled into the air, it seemed to reset the entire space, gently sweeping away the lingering energies left behind by the previous dayâs visitors.
Above, the flowers in the hanging garden stirred with the first touch of morning light, their vibrant petals responding as if in greeting. You watered them with a flick of the wrist, though it felt more like a gesture of care than necessityâthey thrived on the shop's magic more than on water.
The shop had its own rhythm, a delicate balance between the mundane and the mystical. Travelers, clients, and even the occasional spirit wandered in, drawn by the promise of wishes grantedâsome simple, others far more complicated. You had seen all kinds: the weary traveler who just wanted safe passage home, the desperate lover seeking a second chance, or the ambitious merchant hoping to change their fortune.
But nothing in the emporium was granted without a cost, and the price wasnât paid in gold or silver. Every transaction required something far more preciousâa wish. Not the kind made on a whim, but a deeply held desire, pulled from the very core of oneâs soul.
You would watch as they approached the counter, hands trembling ever so slightly as they revealed their request. Their eyes flickered with doubt as the weight of the exchange settled upon them. Standing before you, they were caught between what they needed and what they were about to give up, realizing that their wish, once surrendered, would be gone forever.
You always asked if they were certain. If they understood the nature of their sacrifice. But the emporium never rejected a payment once it was offered.Â
You had become accustomed to the shopâs quirks, trusting its ancient magic to maintain a balance that you could only partly comprehend. It was more than a shop; it was a living entity, guiding not only the customers but you, its keeper, shaping the course of both your lives in subtle, unseen ways.
Everything functioned smoothly, like clockworkâuntil the day Yunho arrived.
From the moment Yunho stepped into the emporium, his presence unsettled you. There was a calm assurance in the way he carried himself, grounding everything around you. Despite never having met him before, something inside you insisted Yunho wasnât a stranger.Â
You recalled the strange memories that had flooded your sensesâthe wind whipping around you as you sat in a car with Yunho, the sun illuminating the way the corner of his eyes crinkled when he smiled. It felt so real, as if youâd lived that moment before, but then it dissolved into something deeper, something raw.Â
The emotions had gripped you before you could react, dragging you under like a riptide. Your knees buckled, and the world tilted, leaving you gasping for air. Yunho was there, of course. Even through the thick haze of your feelings, he kept you steady, his arms the only thing keeping you from crumbling completely.
Even now, the echoes of that moment lingered in your body. You could still feel the weight of the emotions that had passed through you, as if the magic had left an imprint on your soul.Â
âFate has already tied their threads together.â
Your mind raced, trying to grasp Hongjoong and Wooyoungâs conversation.Â
What did that mean? What threads? Could the connection you feltâthis strange, undeniable pullâbe part of some cosmic plan, one that had existed long before you even stepped foot in the emporium?
But how could you accept something so profound when you couldnât even remember him? The thought haunted you, and yet, deep down, the pull toward Yunho only grew stronger, as if Fate itself refused to let you walk away.
You sighed, taking a long drag from your pipe, leaning back as you watched a few late summer blooms drift down from the skylightâs hanging garden. Their petals fluttered like tiny omens in the gentle breeze. Fall had arrived, and with the change in seasons, the line between the living and the departed would thin, bringing even more travelers and clients from different realms.Â
The bell above the door jingled faintly, drawing your attention. You glanced over, catching the sleek, shadowy form slipping through the crack in the doorâa flash of fur before it darted out into the evening. You immediately knew who it was.
âWooyoung,â you called out. The cat froze mid-step, his tail twitching with surprise. Slowly, he turned his head, his onyx eyes gleaming mischievously in the dim light.
âDonât even try it,â you added, placing your hands on your hips. He blinked at you, feigning innocence, but you werenât about to let him slink away without answers this time.
The cat stretched lazily, as if he hadnât just been caught trying to sneak out, then padded toward you with that familiar, too-casual saunter. By the time he reached you, he shifted back into his human form with a dramatic sigh, ruffling his messy hair as if youâd truly inconvenienced him.
âI was just stepping out,â Wooyoung said, giving you that infuriating smirk of his. âNeeded some air. Itâs stuffy in here with all thisâ" He waved his hand around vaguely, ââmagic.â
You couldnât help but chuckle at the absurdity of it. âYou are magic, Wooyoung.â Your tone was teasing, playful. âHavenât you had enough of the outside world and tormenting humans for one lifetime?â
âIâm a cat. Gotta see what the worldâs up to,â he shrugged.Â
There was a beat of silence, and you took a breath before speaking. âI heard your conversation with Hongjoong last night.â
Wooyoung froze for the briefest moment, his eyes widening just slightly before he masked it with another lazy grin. The shift in his demeanor was quick, but youâd known him long enough to recognize the flicker of panic he tried to bury.Â
"Itâs not polite to eavesdrop," he teased, his voice light but edged with a subtle wariness.
You werenât about to let him wiggle his way out of this one. You had seen the way he was squirming, avoiding the real issue, and this time you needed answers.Â
"What does fate have to do with me and Yunho?"
His smile faltered, a crack in his usual carefree facade. Wooyoung shifted uneasily, searching for the right words to soften the blow, but knowing there was no easy way out. He could feel your frustration mounting, the tension stretching unbearably thin.
"Itâs... well, itâs like this," His voice lowered, and for once, he sounded serious. "Hongjoong thinks you and Yunho are bound together in ways that we donât fully understand. Itâs something thatâs deeper and olderâŠsomething that humans refer to as soulmates."
Soulmates.
It sounded ridiculous, unbelievable. You and Yunho, tied together by fate? He was just a traveler, someone the shop had revealed itself to. There was nothing special about him.Â
"How?" you scoffed, shaking your head as if the mere action would dispel the ridiculous notion. "Heâs a stranger, Wooyoung.â
Wooyoung shook his head, his eyes never leaving yours. He shifted uncomfortably, looking anywhere but at you.Â
"Well⊠the thing is you have met him before.â But the thing is... you donât remember. Because you canât, Wooyoung wanted to say.Â
"What are you talking about? Then why canât I remember him? What did I forget?"
Your chest tightened. The frustration, the confusion, the pull youâd felt around Yunho ever since he first entered the shopâit all started to transform into something deeper, something more unsettling. It was as if a fog was lifting, revealing shadows of memories you couldnât quite grasp.
He let out a long breath, rubbing his face. "Itâs complicated. There are things...about you, that you donât remember. That you chose not to remember."
Your mind raced. Memories? With Yunho? The man you barely knew, who had walked into your life like any other traveler? It didnât make sense. None of this did.
"If I erased him from my life, then maybe I had a reason," you snapped, the words tasting bitter. Wooyoung winced but didnât argue.Â
"Fate doesnât just disappear because you forget. Heâs still tied to you, even if you canât feel it." He paused, his eyes searching your face, hoping for some sign of understanding. "Maybe itâs why the shop revealed itself to him. Itâs fate, pulling you back together."
You could feel the ground slipping from beneath you, your grip on reality loosening with every word he spoke. What Wooyoung was suggestingâsoulmates, forgotten love, fateâit sounded like something out of a dream, a fantasy too far removed from the life you knew.Â
"Why does it matter if Iâm connected to him or not?" you continued, your throat tightening as the question lodged itself there, too painful to speak.
The air grew heavy, thick with tension, as if the walls themselves were reacting to the storm brewing inside you. The shelves rattled, and the shopâs energy pulsed erratically, reflecting the confusion and fear you could no longer keep at bay. The lanterns flickered wildly, casting frantic shadows that danced along the walls, twisting in the growing unease.
You tried to steady your breathing, to calm the chaos within, but your mind raced with unanswered questions, with the gnawing suspicion that Wooyoung was right, and it terrified you.Â
Wooyoungâs face fell, the spark of his usual wit dimming into something darker, something almost sorrowful. He shifted uncomfortably again, as though he wished to be anywhere but here, at this moment.
"Because no one wants to see you hurting, Y/N,â His voice was barely above a whisper, thick with regret. "You were in so much pain that you thought forgetting him and becoming the keeper would make it stop."
That name again. Y/N. It echoed in your mind, a foreign weight on your chest. It felt like a name you should know, but it slipped through your grasp. A name tied to a life you no longer remembered.Â
"That toy," he continued, "it triggered something, didnât it? The memoriesâthe emotionsâthey were too strong. And when you felt that, your magic went unstable. The shop could barely handle it."
You shuddered, the memory of that moment still fresh, still raw. But one question clawed at you, louder than the chaos youâd unleashed.
What had been so unbearable that the only answer was to forget?

âWhy is it so cold?â you groaned, bouncing on your toes and rubbing your hands together, trying to get the blood flowing.Â
The train station was always drafty, but today it felt like the cold had settled into your bones, refusing to leave. You shivered and glanced around, surprised to see no snow on the ground. It was oddâthis time of year usually meant blankets of white everywhere, the world covered in a quiet stillness. Yet now, all you had was the biting wind and a gray sky threatening snow that never seemed to come.
Yunho stood beside you, his breath puffing out in small clouds as he huddled deeper into his coat. He laughed softly, his eyes crinkling at the corners as he looked at you.Â
âYouâre always cold,â he teased, nudging your arm with his elbow. âShouldâve worn more layers.â
âEasy for you to say. Youâre practically a furnace,â you grumbled.Â
The two of you had decided to take the train home for the holidays after your first semester of university. You were both exhaustedâfinals had drained whatever energy you had leftâbut there was excitement in the air as Christmas approached.Â
âIâm surprised thereâs no snow,â you mused, gazing up at the dull, overcast sky. The clouds hung low, thick and heavy, but still no sign of snowflakes falling. âFeels weird, doesnât it? Christmas without snow.â
Yunho hummed in agreement beside you, his hands tucked into the pockets of his coat as he followed your gaze. âYeah, itâs like somethingâs missing. Hopefully, itâll snow while weâre home.â
His voice was hopeful, and you could see the small spark of excitement in his eyes. Yunho loved snowâit wasnât just the beauty of it, but the way it brought a sense of stillness and magic to the world. The kind of magic that reminded you both of simpler times, of building snowmen as kids and staying out too long until your fingers were numb.
The next morning, Yunhoâs wish came true.
Snow. Fresh, untouched snow covered everything. The rooftops, the streets, the treesâit all glistened under the early morning light, as if the entire world had been dipped in magic overnight.Â
This was the moment heâd been waiting for, the moment he hoped for when you both had been standing at the train station, wondering if Christmas would even feel like Christmas without snow. Now, it was here. His wish had come true.
But more than that, he wanted to share this moment with you.
You blinked up at the sky, a few lazy snowflakes still drifting down, landing on your lashes and melting against your skin. Yunho stood beside you, watching the way your eyes lit up, the way you took in the moment like it was something precious.Â
The two of you stood there for a while, wordlessly watching the snowfall together. It was the kind of stillness that felt sacred, the kind that only came with the first snow of the season.Â
As Yunho glanced at you, his breath caught. You werenât doing anything specialâjust standing there, bundled up in your oversized hoodie, your hair slightly messy from sleep, your cheeks flushed from the cold. You werenât trying to impress anyone, least of all him. You were just you, in the most effortless way, and somehow, that had always been enough.
There was a simplicity to the moment that felt different, more profound than he expected. Last summer, when youâd spent long, sunny days together, heâd thought he understood what he felt for you. He cared about you more than anyone, maybe more than he shouldâve let on. It was a love that had grown quietly, steadily, and was beginning to envelop him.Â
It was too easy to love you. Too effortless, too natural, as if his heart had always been meant for you. And thatâs what made it so dangerous.
He knew that sometimes, loveâno matter how powerfulâwasnât enough. The thought of risking what you hadâthis simple, effortless connection that meant everything to himâfor something as unpredictable as love felt like falling into the ocean.
And Yunho wasnât ready to make the jump.Â
He groaned, pressing the heels of his hands against his temples as if that could somehow ease the pounding in his skull. His head felt like it was being split open, a dull, relentless ache that refused to let up. The events of the previous night were a blurâfragments of conversation, too many drinks, and the sinking realization that heâd gone well past his limit.
Heâs supposed to head back to Seoul today, back to his life and the steady rhythm of work that usually kept his life in order. But there was no way he could face that right now, not with the amount of alcohol that had been consumed.Â
The events of last night came back to him in disjointed, hazy flashes. He remembered the way your fingers brushed against the plush toy, followed by the sudden paling of your face right before you collapsed to the floor.Â
Yunhoâs heart had nearly stopped at that moment, the world around him crashing into stillness. The usual hum of the emporium faded into nothing, the vibrant colors of the shelves and strange objects blurring into meaningless shapes.Â
His legs moved before his mind could catch up, and he was running, sprinting toward you as if the very air had been torn from his lungs. The world shrank, narrowing to the sight of you lifeless in his arms.
"Y/N, stay with me," he whispered, panic thick in his voice as he cradled your unconscious body. It was the same terror heâd felt the day you disappeared, the same helpless, gut-wrenching fear that had kept him awake at night, haunted by the thought that heâd never see you again.
Yunho held you like his entire world depended on it, his arms wrapped tightly around you, desperate and unrelenting. He pressed his forehead against yours, as he cradled your head against his chest, the warmth of your skin barely noticeable as panic surged inside him.
âIâm sorry, just please, please donât leave me,â he begged, his voice barely holding together. His fingers tightened their grip on you, trembling with the fear that if he let go, even for a second, youâd slip away for good.
He couldnât lose you, not when he had just found you again.
Then came Wooyoungâs revelation. You had chosen to disappear from his life. It wasnât an accident, or some cruel twist of fate. You had asked the shop to erase your memoriesâall of them. He could still hear Wooyoungâs voice, bitter and sharp, recounting the details, but the exact reason why Wooyoung had been so angry at him was lost in the fog of the night.
He remembered the stingâthe way the door slammed behind him, the coldness of the night hitting his face as he stood there, dazed, confused and frustrated. You were alive, bound to this strange realm by forces he didnât fully understand. But worse than that, you had willingly cut him out of your life.
After that, things blurred even more. Heâd ended up at a bar, the numbness setting in as he ordered drink after drink, trying to drown the sea of emotions that threatened to consume him. Somewhere along the way, Yeosang had joined him, and Yunho found himself pouring his heart outâhis frustrations, his guilt, his failures. He had ranted about the weight of trying to be the good guy while everything around him crumbled.
Now, in the harsh light of day, the weight of it all hit him with a different kind of intensity. His heart felt heavy, and he had no idea where to go from here.
Yunho sat up, staring at his phone as if it might give him the answers he was too afraid to ask for. His thumb hovered over Haewonâs name on the screen, trembling slightly. He wasnât sure what he was going to sayâhe didnât have a plan, only a sinking feeling in his chest that told him he couldnât keep pretending everything was fine.Â
The line rang once, then twice. By the third ring, his heart had started racing, the weight of everything he had to confront pressing down on him like a vice. When it went to voicemail, Yunhoâs stomach dropped.
âHey, itâs Haewon! Sorry I missed your call, but leave a message and Iâll get back to you soon!â
The artificial cheer in her voice made his skin crawl, and for a moment, he couldnât speak. He could almost picture herâsmiling, carefree, the version of her that had loved him wholeheartedly. But that wasnât who she was anymore. That wasnât who they were.
"Hey..." he finally whispered, âgive me a call when you get a chance.â Yunho waited for a beat, as if hoping she might pick up at the last second, but the line remained silent, empty.
âYunho? Arenât you getting ready to head back?â His momâs voice was gentle, but it startled him from his thoughts. She appeared in the doorway, concern etched in the lines of her face.Â
He didnât respond immediately, his gaze dropping to the floor. âI donât know if Iâm going back,â he admitted softly, his voice thick with uncertainty.Â
His mom walked in, taking a seat on the edge of his bed, her presence warm and calming. She had always been able to read him better than anyone, even when he was trying his best to hide. Mrs. Jeong didnât say anything for a moment, just letting the silence hang between them, giving him the space to breathe.
âTell me more.â
Yunho sighed, running a hand through his hair, feeling the weight of everything heâd been holding in. It was strangeâhe felt like a teenager again, venting to his mom about his problems, but this time it felt more suffocating. The future he had thought he wanted, the life he had worked so hard to build, no longer felt like his.
âIâm hungover. Iâm miserable. I donât want to marry Haewon. Iâm not happy with my job or where I am in my life. Mingi is my only friend, Yeosang kind of hates me, and Y/NâŠâ He let out a watery chuckle, the sound laced with bitterness. âSheâs gone.â
There it was, the truth laid bareâthe reality that had been gnawing at him for months, too terrifying to confront. The words hung in the air, heavy with the weight of everything he had been trying to ignore.
Mrs. Jeongâs gaze softened as she listened, her heart heavy with a motherâs instinct to protect, but knowing she couldnât fix this for him. She reached out, placing a hand over his.Â
âYouâve been carrying this for a while, havenât you?â Her voice was soft, laced with a sadness that only came from witnessing the quiet battles of someone you love.
Yunho looked down to their joined hands, his throat tightening. The words he had held back for so long hovered on the edge of his lips, threatening to escape.Â
âI thought I could handle it. Butâ" He paused, his fingers gripping hers a little tighter, his chest heaving as he fought to keep the floodgates closed.Â
"I donât want to keep pretending Iâm okay,â he continued, voice cracking slightly. âIâm tired, Mom. Of the job, the engagement, everything. Itâs like Iâm suffocating, and I donât know how to breathe anymore.â he replied, quieter now, almost like he was talking to himself. It was the first time heâd admitted it out loud. The fear that had been chaining him to a future he didnât want.
His mother exhaled softly, her brow furrowing as she absorbed his words. After a moment, she squeezed his hand and spoke gently, her voice calm but firm.
âYouâve always been so considerate. Always thinking of others. But have you thought about what you want? Truly want, not just what you think you should want?â
It wasnât something Yunho had ever allowed himself to consider fully, and even now, the thought seemed almost too outlandish, too selfish. But the way his mother looked at him, with such understanding, made it feel less frightening, less impossible to confront.
âYouâre allowed to want something different, Yunho. Youâre allowed to change your mind. Youâre allowed to choose yourself.â
Her words struck something within him, unraveling the tightly wound rope of expectations he had tangled himself in for so long. He hesitated, his heart pounding as he dared to voice the question that had haunted him for months.
âSo you wouldnât be upset if I called off the wedding?â His voice was small, almost as if he were afraid the very mention of it might cause everything to collapse around him.
His mother shook her head, her expression soft and reassuring. âOf course not, Yunho. Haewon is lovely, butâŠâ She paused, choosing her words carefully, as she looked at him. âI always felt like she wasnât the one for you.â
Yunho blinked, surprised by the admission. His mother had never said anything like that before, and in all their talks about the wedding, she had always been supportive, never giving any sign that she might have doubts of her own.Â
âWhy didnât you ever say anything?â he asked, almost incredulous.Â
âBecause youâre finally listening to yourself. This is your life, not mine, not anyone elseâs. It wasnât my place to tell you how to live, Yunho. I wanted to believe that you knew what was best for you.â
âAnd if I quit my job?â he asked, testing the waters, anxiety sparking in his voice.Â
âGunho would be thrilled,â she laughed. âYou know, he was absolutely livid when you took the finance job over the Tigers. Iâve never seen him so upset with you! He ranted for weeks about how you were wasting your talents behind a desk instead of being out there building the ultimate dream team.â
His motherâs laughter faded, replaced by a more serious expression. âWeâve all had our hopes for you, Yunho. But those were our hopes, not yours. Lifeâs not a straight line. Itâs full of twists and turns. You donât have to stay on a path that doesnât feel right anymore.â
There was something comforting about the idea, the notion of stepping away from the path he had chosen, back to something that felt more like homeâmore like himself. Sitting with his mother, he began to wonder: What if it wasnât reckless? What if choosing the life he truly wanted wasnât some wild, selfish fantasy? What if it was okay to dream again?
His mind wandered to you, to the quiet snowfall and how the snowflakes caught on your lashes. He thought of that summer, driving to the beach, the wind in your hair and the sun beaming down on you, like the world itself couldnât touch you as long as you were together.
He thought of meeting you for the first time at six years old, running across the street and greeting you as if heâd known him your entire life. It was as if heâd found his other half that day, the person who made him feel complete even in his innocence.
But then, more painfully, he thought of meeting you for the first time again. Only this time, you hadnât known him at all.Â
With you, there was no need to fill the silence. Everything felt easy, natural, like you were meant to exist beside each other. You were his best friend, the one person who made him feel like himself. And suddenly, Yunho knew.Â
It was you.Â
The version of himself that existed when he was with youâthat was who he truly was. It was a terrifying realization, but at the same time, it was the most certain thing heâd felt in a long time. You had always been the one constant in his life, the one person who made everything feel okay, even when it wasnât.
And he didnât want to lose that. He didnât want to lose you.
He wanted a future with you.
Yunho swallowed, his pulse quickening, but for the first time in what felt like forever, his mind was clear.Â
âI thinkâŠâ he began, his voice steady, resolute, âI know where I want to go from here.â

Pushing open the door, the familiar chime rang through the shop. It was empty, save for you, and Yunhoâs breath caught when he saw you standing behind the counter, bathed in the glow of fading daylight.Â
He glanced over at you, watching the way you moved, how you seemed so different and yet so familiar. The person standing in front of him was still you, the same person heâd known since childhood. The memories from childhood rushed back againâthe snow, the summer sun, the first time you played baseball together. It all made sense now, in ways it never had before.
âYunho,â you greeted, your voice carrying a warmth as you lifted your hand with a graceful flick. The scroll hovering beside you shimmered for a moment, then dissolved into the air, disappearing as if it had never existed.Â
âHow are you feeling?â Yunho asked quietly. There was something boyish, almost shy, in the way he looked at you, like he was a kid again, standing in front of his crush, hoping for something, anything, that would tell him he was making the right choice.
âBetter. Thank you for being here the other night. It seems like you were a big help to Wooyoung.â
"I'm glad to hear that," he murmured, his voice soft as his gaze lingered on you, his eyes softening as if he were seeing you for the first time all over again. There was a quiet admiration that he couldnât quite hide, no matter how hard he tried to keep his emotions in check.
"I uhâŠ" he hesitated, his eyes flickered away for a moment, as if searching for courage in the silence between you, âIâm leaving for Seoul. Just to take care of some things. I wanted to see you before I left.â
You tilted your head, curiosity lighting up your eyes, the corners of your lips lifting in that familiar way that made his heart stutter. A playful yet gentle hum escaped your lips.Â
âOh? And whyâs that?â
Your question hung in the air, teasing him, pulling at the tangled mess of feelings he'd tried to bury for so long. He looked at you, a faint flush creeping up his neck as he struggled to find the right response.Â
âIââ he started, but his voice faltered. His pulse quickened, and for a moment, he felt completely exposed. âI couldnât leave without seeing you first.â
The air around you seemed to still, the gravity of his admission settling like dust in the corners of the emporium. The idea of leaving felt wrong to him, and yet it was inevitable, something he had to do.Â
Your eyes softened with understanding, feeling more like home than any place he could go. Something in your gaze recognized him, sensing the invisible thread that tied you together.Â
âNo matter where you are,â you said quietly, your voice carrying the same calm assurance that had always soothed him, âthe Emporium will always be within reach. As will I.â
The words were simple, yet they held a promiseâa promise that went beyond physical space or memory. The Emporium was never bound by the ordinary rules of the world, and neither, it seemed, were you. Your small, understanding smile made Yunho feel that, despite the uncertainty, everything would be okay.
âBesides,â you continued, a playful glint flickering in your eyes, âI can always ask Wooyoung to lend a helping hand. He knows the way.â
âThat cat does nothing but bully me,â he muttered, rubbing the back of his neck, recalling how Wooyoung had made him a target of mischief.
Your laugh filled the space between you, a sound that seemed to chase away the heaviness for just a moment. Though Yunho tried to maintain his frown, the corners of his lips betrayed him, lifting into a reluctant smile.Â
Even though you didnât remember him, it didnât matter. There was something deeper between you, something unshakeable. And that, in its own way, gave him the strength he needed to leave.
You stepped forward, that invisible thread that had always seemed to exist between you tugged at your heart, drawing you toward him. It was a connection that transcended words, possibly even space and time. Yunhoâs eyes lingered on you, their quiet intensity making your heart skip a beat.
âThe next time I come into the shop,â he began, his voice low, âIâll be ready to make my wish.â
You searched his face, trying to read the depths of what he meant, but all you found was that same gentle fervor staring back at you.Â
âYouâve thought about it?â
âI have,â he admitted. âWith everything thatâs happening, I think I finally know what I want.â
The weight of his words settled between you like a promise. Whatever his wish was, it wasnât something to be rushedâit belonged to the future, a time when he was ready to claim it. And somehow, you understood that.
âIâll be waiting,â you whispered, though you knew Yunho heard it.
As he turned to leave, a sudden thought gripped you, pulling you back from the brink of your goodbye. âYunho⊠before you leaveâŠâ
He froze at the sound of his name on your lips, his heart fluttering. Every breath, every glance, vibrated with something unspoken, something powerful.
âWho are you?â you asked, your voice soft, tentative. âTo me?â
<< iii | v >>

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She was not herself most probably because she did not know who that was. But I did. And I could never forget. And so when she lost herself and could not find her way back I would be her Guiding Light taking her home. Because despite what she believes, she is loved and will always be.
Ghost Girl
just finished it yesterday and i. am. obsessed!!!!
Forget Me Not by Alyson Derrick
Forget Me Not by Alyson Derrick was such a page-turner! Stevie and Nora have been secretly dating and are about to leave for California now that they're eighteen. But after falling and hurting her head, Stevie forgets the last two years of her life.
I love the amnesia trope and this was so romantic. The book follows Stevie's POV, with a few diary entries from Nora, so that we get to know her thoughts as well. It's a standalone, but I wouldn't say no to a sequel.
There's major f/f. Stevie and her friend Ryan are Asian American.
just finished it yesterday and i. am. obsessed!!!!
Forget Me Not by Alyson Derrick
Forget Me Not by Alyson Derrick was such a page-turner! Stevie and Nora have been secretly dating and are about to leave for California now that they're eighteen. But after falling and hurting her head, Stevie forgets the last two years of her life.
I love the amnesia trope and this was so romantic. The book follows Stevie's POV, with a few diary entries from Nora, so that we get to know her thoughts as well. It's a standalone, but I wouldn't say no to a sequel.
There's major f/f. Stevie and her friend Ryan are Asian American.
In the silence of your absence
I hear my heat
Struggle to beat.