Chapter One

Black Canvas

thathanagirl.blogspot.com

January 9th 2018

I saw an old friend today, somebody that I haven't seen in what feels like a lifetime. You know that feeling you get when you come home after a long trip, and you unlock the front door, shut off the alarm and take a deep breath because your apartment is welcoming you back? You remember where all the light switches are, but you don't remember the things left on the kitchen table. Did you put those things there, that unread pile of mail and that pen that's almost out of ink, or was someone in your apartment while you were gone? Or maybe the apartment shifted itself around in your absence, a living organism, breathing, growing, changing, all while you were out doing the same thing. 

That's how it felt when I saw him this morning: intimately familiar, his smile, the curve of his nose, but all the time since we last saw each other between us like a fog. I was worried for a second that he wouldn't recognise me, but then he turned and said my name. And I didn't know until then, but I'd been missing the sound of his voice. And hearing it again made me feel full. 

Do you ever think, when you meet someone, that there will probably be a time in the future where you no longer know them? I knew from the first day I met this old friend that we were not destined for forever. I've learned not to be too optimistic; when somebody wants to say goodbye, I let them go. But today I saw an old friend again, and I started to wonder if I'm holding myself back with that attitude. Maybe I ought to have grabbed him by the shoulders all those years ago, shook him and said, "Stay, please, stay." 

But I didn't, and I'll never know what might have happened. And what good are what if's, anyway? 

- S


It is raining in Seoul when I see him again. 

Fitting, isn't it? We fell in love in a city where it always rains, and we meet again in a city where the sun always shines yet when I see him again it's raining.  I've lived in two cities on two continents, walked cobblestone sidewalks and cement slabs, and they always lead back to him. It's a curse, maybe. It's certainly not a blessing. 

I'm waiting for coffee when it happens. Once I read something about how we spend approximately one-third of our lives asleep, but I'd bet I spend nearly that much of mine waiting for coffee. I'd put money on it. All the money that I normally spend on coffee, I'd put on that bet. And then when I win, I'd buy even more coffee. 

I should have been at work half an hour ago, but instead, I'm waiting for my coffee, hiding my face behind my hair and listening to the conversations around me. At one of the tables sits a man in a suit, his oversized phone pressed to his ear. He says in a stern voice that it's not his turn to pick up Taejung from school today. He did it yesterday, he says. It's definitely your turn. 

The woman at the table by the window stabs her pen into her notebook, once, twice, three times, trying to jog the ink, or maybe her mind. Her tea grows cold on the table in front of her. And at the next table, a dad and his little girl, her crooked braids no doubt courtesy of him; she drags her crayon across the pages of her colouring book, skidding off the paper and onto the table. His eyes shoot up and his newspaper falls as his hand darts across the table to stop her-  

And that's when I see him. 

It takes me a minute to recognise him, but I'm struck instantly with a feeling of familiarity, an itch at the back of my skull, and I wonder if maybe I knew him back in elementary school, or one summer at camp in the woods, where I skinned my palms clutching the dock because I was too afraid of the water to swim. And then he turns. I catch him in profile, and I realise that I recognise him because I see his image nearly as often as I see my own. It's there whenever I go online, captured in dozens of paparazzi shots, the same movement from a thousand similar angles echoed across my screen like a game of spot the difference. 

And I know his face from my memories, the same ones I try to hide in the deepest drawers of my mind below the grocery lists and tax deadlines. Somehow, no matter how hard I push, I can never quite close them completely. I look at him and I remember the way he always kept his eyes shut for an extra moment after he kissed me, and the sound of his voice echoing in the bathroom whenever he sang in the shower. I picture him in my mind and I look at him standing in front of me now, and I play spot the difference. 

He steps up to the register and I watch his mouth as he orders, but I can't hear the words. I imagine I know what he's saying, small drip coffee, room for milk and sugar, but maybe he's changed his habits. His hair has definitely changed; it's been dyed a dark russet. He's dressed differently, too, in overpriced clothes that I wonder, whenever I see them in photographs if he buys because he can afford to. He stands like somebody who knows that eyes are always on him, hip cocked, gaze distant. Sunglasses sit atop his head, even though there's no need for them today. 

"Nobody wears sunglasses because it's sunny," he told me once. "They're fashionable, Yeon." 

My fingers froze inside my gloves as we walked through Hongdae on the coldest day of winter, and he looked at me through his sunglasses and grinned. I remember it now, that smile, clear as if it were yesterday - though up until now I'm sure I'd forgotten about it. 

But it washes over me like a harsh winter wind, and when he grins at the cashier as he pushes over a 10,000 won, I know it's him for certain. He uses his free hand to adjust his sunglasses atop his head, and I wonder if he's changed a bit. He seems to be the same person he's always been. 

But I'm not. I'm a different person now. When we met, all I wanted was for somebody to love me and make me feel something and maybe break my heart, and now I know that I never want to hurt that bad again. I wait for him to turn, for our eyes to meet, and for him to look away when he doesn't recognise me. I wait and think of the lines on his face that day he said goodbye to me, deep as oceans and already regretting. There's an itch in my gut that feels like the moment when all I wanted to do was run my fingertips across his forehead and smooth out the creases, and instead, I let him go. I wait and wait and I'm sure the barista is going to finish my drink before he even looks my way and then- 

Then he turns and steps away from the register, and he looks at me. His eyes are brown and bright and there's a spark of something there, a glint of recognition as he looks at my hair, shorter than it used to be, or my eyes, with less eyeliner than I used to wear, and then the corners of his smile droop, and I know he's thinking of the day everything fell apart. 

I know he's thinking of it because I've relived it a thousand times, tattooed it on the inside of my eyelids as some kind of self-imposed purgatory. It was raining in London that day, a rough rain, the kind that makes mud that grabs the soles of your boots and pulls you down. For just a second, the briefest of terrifying moments, you wonder if you'll ever get free. We set each other free that day, and I don't regret it. But every time I open my eyes from the memories, it hurts in the pit of my stomach and the centre of my chest like it only just happened. 

It hurts now, as our eyes meet in the city where it never rains and I wait for one of us to say something. 

I know it has to be me.

"Baekhyun." The word is stale on my tongue - it's been ages since I said it out loud. I used to think I owned the word, owned the boy who wore it. But now I know better. I know that I can't own anybody. It's our names that own us. 

"Seoyeon," he says. "I knew you'd moved back, but-" 

"It's a big city," I say. He takes a step toward me. I remind myself that I am not afraid. This boy - a man, now - has no power over me anymore. 

"But a small town," he says, taking another step forward, and another, and then, before I can jump out of the way, he hugs me. 

It shocks my heart into warp speed, but I wrap my arms around him too and try not to wonder if this is the goodbye hug I never got that rainy day in London when he boarded a plane bound for New York and I refused to say, "safe travels." That night, I stared at my ceiling for hours, a nerve soup bubbling in my stomach as I prayed that his plane would touch down safely. 

Now, I keep my superstitions in check. I walk under ladders like they can't collapse and hurt me, and I don't blink at broken mirrors. But I always say goodbye, even if goodbye means forever. 

Now Baekhyun, my past, my never again, my dream of a boy with a laugh like fairy-dust, pulls me tight against him and I bask in the warmth of it, in the safety. In the faint smell of his cologne clinging to the collar of his jacket and the expanse of his torso and the memory that hits like warm sunlight of the last time, we held each other like this. London smelled like rain on concrete that day as I pressed my head to Baekhyun's chest and pretended that the moment would never end. 

And then he lets me go. I sink back to earth and land unsteadily on my own two feet, and I remind myself of who I am. These feet, these legs, they carry me places and they hold me up. They are strong. I am strong. London was Baekhyun's city, but Seoul is mine. My city, my safe haven, the backdrop for my dreams. 

"What are you doing in Seoul, Baekhyun?" I ask him. I smell his cologne, and as I feel it expanding and filling the space between us like all the time between now and when we last met, I realise I don't want to know the answer. I don't want to know when he's going away again. I wish I hadn't seen him again at all because it hurts. 

It doesn't hurt like it did four years ago, when I sat in the empty bathtub in my apartment with my socks on and listened to my sobs echo back to me off the tiles and through the phone line where, on the other end, my mother was sitting in her kitchen with a fresh cup of coffee, apologising that she couldn't fix things for me. 

"I'm sorry it hurts, Yeonnie," she said. "You've just got to let it hurt." 

It doesn't hurt like that now, and I don't know if it ever will again, because I am a different person than I was then. What didn't kill me made me stronger. It made me rock solid and impenetrable. But I will never be gold again.

"We should get lunch sometimes," Baekhyun says. I avoid his eyes: I know their power. I know they can capture me like quicksand. Over his shoulder, I see the barista set my drink on the counter. 

"Iced caramel macchiato extra cream for Seoyeon!" she calls. Baekhyun flinches. I've cut off ten inches of my hair, but my drink order hasn't changed in four years. 

"Sure," I say. My hand shakes as I pick up my cold drink, but I pretend not to notice. "I'm sorry, I have a meeting, I really have to go." 

Baekhyun opens his mouth, but I cut him off, stepping around him and reaching for a cardboard sleeve to slide onto my cup. 

"You can call me," I say, looking at him over my shoulder. "My number's the same." 

"R-right," Baekhyun says. He looks a little dumbstruck, and I think I'm almost in the clear: he hasn't realised that his number's changed, his number's probably changed a dozen of times in four years of being an international celebrity, and there's no way he still has mine. 

I give him a smile, a goodbye smile, one that I hope says, I never want to see you again, and just as I'm about to step away, he grabs my shoulder and stops me. 

"Wait, Seo-" He drops his hand from my shoulder and uses it to push his hair off of his face. I wonder if he's grown it out so that he can hide behind it. "It was good to see you again." 

"Yeah," I say. "You too." 

He lets me go, but I feel his eyes following me across and our of the cafe and into the rain. I put up my umbrella and try not to feel London's concrete sidewalks under my feet as I dodge puddles with my head down. It's been three years, nearly four since I felt it under and around me as I mapped it in footsteps and the love songs that I hummed under my breath like they belonged to me. It's been three, nearly four years since I boarded an airplane and watched it get smaller and smaller beneath me, a maze of streets, so many that I'd never explored. Sometimes I worry that the city will forget me, that it'll call me a stranger again. But I don't know if my heart could handle it if I went back. 

And I wonder though I don't want to if Baekhyun was really glad to see me. When we first met, my heart was made of glass and Baekhyun wore his on his sleeve. We fell in love too hard and too fast and I wanted it more than anything, and I let it consume me. Baekhyun was always saying things offhand, throwing words at me carelessly like loose change into a fountain. But I always held on with a tight fist, until the day came that we became strangers again and I had to let go. 

***

At the studio, Minseo waits for me just inside the door, biting her lower lip. 

"You're late," she says when I open the door. The bell hanging from the knob jingles violently against the wood. "Don't you have a deadline?" 

"I always have a deadline." 

Minseo blinks and opens to remind me that this deadline is different, this is the deadline, but I shake my head, shutting her up. She lets me go past her into the back, where my workspace is set up. In the front half of the studio, I teach art classes to kids in the afternoon and adults in the evenings, but the mornings are mine. 

They're mine to plan my daily strip for me blog, sharpen my pencils until the tips are so sharp that they break as soon as they touch the paper, and draw the same thing over and over until it's as close as the image in mind as I can get it. And the mornings are mine to fret about the deadline. 

I thought it was an amazing opportunity when I was first approached about it. Of course, I did. A memoir, the editor, a tall Chinese woman named Meiying who leads with her s when she walks, said. We want to publish your graphic memoir, she said, her accent unnerving me. We'll give you this massive amount of money for a graphic memoir about your college experience. A coming of age story for the ages, if you will. 

If I will. That's the problem: the deadline is approaching faster than I can draw if I were drawing at all. When I close my eyes and think of my college experience, all I see is a little student apartment in London, Phoenix Garden in a thunderstorm, and Byun Baekhyun. I know that's not all of it. I know that when I got back from London, I spent two weeks one summer driving across the country and back with Taeson, gluing my heart back together district by district. And I know that there are parts of my past that Baekhyun never touched, but I can't think of them now. 

His voice echoes in my head as I hang up my trench coat and reach for a pencil. "Seoyeon." I know that was a slip-up, a mistake, the resurfacing of an old habit. Baekhyun didn't even call me the day we said goodbye. He barely said anything at all that day. But it grates on me nonetheless, nails on a chalkboard, digging up thoughts and feelings I've long buried away. 

I grab for a pencil and a piece of paper. It's been a long time since I've drawn Baekhyun, but as he begins to take shape on the paper in front of me, I realise that I've always known he'd make an appearance in my art. I knew when he walked away from me that we might've been done, but we weren't over. I looked at him too many times with my eyes and my heart for things to be over that easily. 

His hair is easy to draw, the waves flowing easily from my pencil, but I struggle with his face, with the smile lines around his mouth and the strong angles of his jaw. The features look all wrong. Though the speech bubble reads, "Wait, Seo-" this isn't my Baekhyun. 

My Baekhyun. He smiled like the world wasn't riding on his shoulders, spoke to me like we were speaking a language that only the two of us could understand. The first time I drew him, it was in a brand-new leather bound book that I'd bought myself to match the one he always carried around and never let me look inside. For a week I carried it around with me, afraid to crack the spine, intimidated by all the blank pages. And then one day we were at a cafe drinking hot chocolate and I found myself opening the little book to the first page and drawing Baekhyun's face, mid-joke, smile wide and eyes crinkled. I drew four different panels, four different moments, and when Baekhyun asked to keep it, even after I spilled hot chocolate on the page, I knew it meant something. 

I didn't give it to him, though. I was too afraid to tear pages out of the book. Too afraid to make it less than it was when it arrived in my hands. 

I smudge out the face on my page with the side of my hand, blurring out the eyes so they can't see me, and I shoved the page into the top drawer of the desk, where I keep all of the drawings that are too personal to go on my website. Most of them are from the week after my breakup with my rebound from Baekhyun, a business type named Yonghwa who broke up with me to move to Busan. 

Change, I've learned, lodges itself in my heart like an arrow, and it always takes a while for the hole to close up and the pain to dull to a gentle, barely irksome ache. Shutting things away in drawers helps only a little bit. But I do it anyway because it's the only way I know how to hide from my memories. 

On a fresh sheet of paper, I reconstruct the man with the newspaper and his little girl. I embellish a little bit: when he lunges across the table to stop her drifting crayon, he finds that her drawing depicts the two of them and the puppy she wants for Christmas. 

In the first panel, I draw the Christmas tree, a puppy with a bow on its collar sitting beneath it. The caption reads, "The Best Christmas EVER." 

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nyamnyamnyam
#1
This was... an absolutely stunning read. From the character development of both Seoyeon and Baekhyun to the pacing of your writing, from the buttery way you string words together to the aching, bittersweet feeling of both uncertainty and resounding truth evoked by this story, everything is perfect.

Although both Seoyeon and Baekhyun are holding positions in life that most of us can't relate with (soon-to-be published graphic novelist and international celebrity), the way they think and feel is so relatable and human. Wanting to both forget and to try again, to be loved and to love yourself, all of that is just part of the human experience, and you depict that in such a lovely, poignant way in this story. Thank you for sharing such a beautiful piece of writing with us!
SarangRae
#2
Chapter 5: Whoa this is really great and I'm disappointed this doesn't have a lot of attention. I love this message of life being an unfinished mess and life not being all about love, but love still being a part of it. I love how Seoyeon recognised needing to write the story of Seoyeon and Baekhyun first, to get it out of her system, to write something for herself before writing something for an audience, because love stories are not life stories and her life is not over yet. Thank you for writing this. It's made me realise something about my own love story, that it's okay to not be sure if I'm over this boy. I doubt we'll get back together but I now accept that although our love story is over, my life story isn't and I have so much more to realise and discover about my feelings for him and about myself. I'm nowhere near my ending.
Saudakpop #3
Chapter 5: This was really detailed and well written. I loved the message at the end.
neutromin
#4
This seriously needs more recognition...I finished and looked up at the title expecting to see it featured! O.O
AmpersandAR #5
Hello, I've finished your review. Please come pick it up as soon as possible!
http://www.asianfanfics.com/story/view/983939/37
hcanarda #6
So freakin underrated!!!
typicals #7
Chapter 5: this was beautifully written and amazing.
deerbaekkie #8
Chapter 5: wow...just wow.. beautiful... this is beautiful..as if this was happening in the story of my life..I can feel them..gosh.. goosebumps