Chapter Five

Black Canvas

"This is great, Seoyeon-ah," Meiying is saying, smiling like I've never seen her as she flips through my recent pages. "This is exactly what we're looking for." 

She smiles at me and I know that I should feel elated: in a rush of mad artist energy; I finished the book. I managed to find the ending I've been struggling with for so long, the kind of ending that feels final but still open like there's still more story to tell, but you feel okay that you've reached the last page because paper Seoyeon is okay. Paper Seoyeon is okay, and real Seoyeon is okay too, but she knows there's something missing. 

I know there's something missing because when I close my eyes all I see is Baekhyun's back, walking away from me like I never wanted to see again, and I hear my own voice echoing like church bells: "please don't call me." It wasn't a mistake - I know that I needed the space to find my story, to tell it the way it needed to be told - but now I don't know how to fix it. I pushed Baekhyun away because he was clouding my mind, but now that the stress of finishing the book is gone, he's back, rain clouds thundering across my every thought. 

"I'll be in touch soon," Meiying says, securing the pages I gave her into a folder and sweeping out of my studio as quickly as she arrived. 

I touch the necklace around my neck, the fake gold, heartbreak necklace, and wonder what I'm supposed to do now. Everything feels upside down: I'm wearing the necklace like it's not a lie that I've spent the past month staring at as it sat on top of my dresser, and I've pushed away the only boy I ever wanted to stay, and I don't know what to do without my book. 

My studio suddenly feels too big, like it's filled with too much air. Minseo has the day off and the silence of the place swirls around me, consumes me. I busy myself cleaning off my work table, putting away all the drafts in the filing cabinet and organising my pencils and wiping off months of charcoal off the surface. I find the receipt from the Thai food buried under some pages, and I picture Baekhyun here, eating from the carton and sitting completely still so that I could draw him, but the memory is interrupted by the one of him leaving. Leaving me once again, and me once again letting him go. 

I itch suddenly to talk about it, to seek forgiveness for the mistakes I've made, but I know I'm not ready to talk to Baekhyun yet. I feel it in my heart that I'm not ready. So I call Taeson instead. 

"Baekhyun's back." 

There's a moment of silence before Taeson speaks, her voice crackling through the phone line from far away to reach me where I sit in the studio, running my fingers over the necklace around my neck. 

When Taeson answered the phone, I tried for a 'how are you?' or 'how are the wedding plans?' but all I could manage to get out is, "Baekhyun's back." It's the news I've been meaning to tell her for weeks, and I tell myself that I'm only letting her know now because I've been too busy to call, but I know it's because of something else. It's because it's taken me this long to figure out why he's here. 

"Oh, yeah?" she finally says. Her voice is soft, gentle, and I'm back in a rundown Jeep, hurtling down a highway in the middle of nowhere as SNSD blasts through the stereo. We lived on bungeoppang ice cream that summer. "How are you feeling, Seo?" 

"Confused. I'm confused, but in a good way." 

Taeson hums. "Does he want anything from you?" 

Taeson never really understood how it was with me and Baekhyun. She couldn't understand because she never saw it. She only saw the aftermath, my shattered glass heart and how every other word I spoke was coated in a layer bitterness so thick that the meaning was lost. Her words rub me the wrong way: only in my darkest, saddest moments did I ever think that Baekhyun was using me back then, and I know that he's not using me now. 

"He wants something with me," I tell her. "If I want it too." 

"And do you?" This is the million dollar question, the one with no clear answer. I don't know what to say, so I don't say anything. I pushed Baekhyun away this time. All I ever wanted was for him to stay, and instead, I told him to go. 

"I don't think I can help you figure that out, Seo," Taeson says. 

I don't know what I was expecting. Not a revelation, but a hint, maybe, as to which direction is the way forward. It's forward that I need to go, not back. 

"What was it that you loved about Baekhyun before?" Taeson asks. The question surprises me - doesn't she know? Didn't we spend hours and hours analysing every moment I ever spent with Baekhyun, trying to turn him into the bad guy? I wanted so badly for him to be the villain so that I could walk away clean - a victim, but clean - but I know now that we were both at fault. 

And as I look at the drawing of Baekhyun spread across the table in front of me, I know that Taeson's not asking for her. She's asking for me. 

"His smile," I say, picturing it, all teeth and joy. "His sense of humour. His open-heartedness. His sense of adventure." The way his body felt curled around me, like a shield, like a warm sweater, like a second skin. The way his hum, pressed against my skin, s its way through my veins like a jolt of electricity. I don't say these things aloud, but I remember them, and suddenly long for them again. 

I told myself after Baekhyun that I was done with painful love, with emotions so big and strong they choke the heart and so bright that they flicker out fast as fireflies. When I was 20, all I wanted was a love like the ones in the movies, a love for the ages, the stuff of legends, but now I know the truth about feelings so big they touch you deep inside - they can disappear just as quickly as they come. And when they leave, they leave you raw and they leave you empty, and in their place, a coldness that says, no, no, never, not again. 

But I think of Baekhyun and trace my fingers over the lines of his cartoon frame, and I know that it was more than big, flickering feelings for me and him. It was little ones, too, and small moments and minute glances and the feeling of his hand holding mine, all of it saying, "safe, safe, safe.

"Has any of that changed?" Taeson asks me now. "All those things you loved about Baekhyun?" 

"I don't know," I say, Baekhyun and I have been tiptoeing around each other - or maybe that's just me. He's been completely open with me, and I'm the one who's been too afraid of what might break. 

"Maybe that's what you need to find out." 

"Yeah, maybe." 

When I look at Baekhyun, all I see is change - I see the man who became of the boy I once knew, and it's so overwhelming that I can't focus on the details. I lose the familiar smile beneath the long hair, the bright eyes beneath the heavy sunglasses. But when I close my eyes and imagine him, I see the Baekhyun I drew in my studio last night, dark circles under his eyes and unspoken words in the corner of his mouth. I don't see the Baekhyun from so long ago, the one I once thought of as mine. That Baekhyun is nothing more than a memory now. 

So I call him. "I'll call you," I said, and though my fingers shake as I pull up his number, I hit dial anyway. "What is it you're so afraid of?" he'd said, and now I know the answer. 

"Are you going to leave again?" I ask when he answers. Are we doomed to repeat the past? 

"Yeon? Are you okay?" 

"Yeah," I say. I try not to let my voice shake. "Answer the question. Are you going to leave again?" 

There's a pause, five, ten, fifteen seconds. They tick by slowly as I chew my thumb and wonder why I'm so afraid now of something I was never afraid of when we first met. Or was it his leaving then that's made me so afraid that it might happen again now? 

"Is that what you're afraid of?" he asks, his voice on the edge of laughter. If he laughs at me, I don't know what I'll do. I'll scream, I'll cry, I'll hand up and throw my phone across the room. Or maybe I'll take a deep breath and hold on for another second. "That I'm going to leave again?" 

"I don't know why you're here, Baekhyun," I say, and now I'm crying. I wipe my eyes and clear my throat so that Baekhyun won't know. "You haven't told me what you're doing in Seoul or how long you're staying. There's so much we haven't talked about." 

"So let's talk," he says. "I'm here because my last breakup, you know why we broke up? She cheated on me, and I'm sure you know that because it was all over the tabloids. But what nobody knows is that I was cheating on her too, with you-" 

"What-" 

"I haven't been able to get you out of my head," he says, not letting me interrupt. His voice rumbles low and deep over the phone line, and I feel it in my bones. Back when I spent nights curled in Baekhyun's arms, I used to dream of ways to bottle his voice and wear it around my neck, pressed close to my skin. "I haven't forgotten you, not for one second, and I never regretted you. The only thing I've ever regretted is leaving you." 

He pauses, but I don't say anything. I realise as these words spill out of him like a current to the ocean that they are the words he's been holding back all along. I've said my piece, and now it's his turn.

"And I'm here because we broke up, my band, and I needed something new, and because it's hell back in London, and because whenever I close my eyes, all I see is you." 

The words hang there, heavy and impatient, and I wish suddenly that Baekhyun had said them to my face so that I can see in his eyes how letting them out felt for him. Baekhyun's always been good with words, with charming hostesses into giving us the best table in an overbooked restaurant and making me blush at the worst possible times, but he's also always been good at reading his own heart. He's as good at reading his own heart as I am bad at reading mine. 

"Yeon?" 

"Yeah, I'm here." I feel breathless, and as I struggle for words, I reach for the paper and pencil in front of me. My hands move almost on its own, helping me detangle my thoughts. "So you're not leaving then?" 

He laughs, a half-laugh, half-sigh, the kind filled with relief. "Not unless you want me to." 

I know he's joking, but the thought makes me freeze. "No, that's not what I want." And then I say what I couldn't four years ago. "Please stay with me." 

"Will you go for a drive with me?" he asks. 

"Okay," I say. I think of Taeson's question and long suddenly to run my hands over Baekhyun's body and mind and find what I love about him, old and new. Love - I think the word easily, and it scares me, but not enough to make me want to run away. 

Baekhyun arrives just as the sun is setting. He meets me at the studio door and walks me to his car. I wave goodbye to Minseo over my shoulder and smile at him, but I'm afraid to speak. The anxiety of a thousand questions bubbles in my stomach like boiling water. I imagine steam coming out of my ears. I'm full of hot air, a thousand jumbled, masked emotions escaping, finally. 

When we get to the car, a mild BMW Coupe, nothing like the more extravagant, exotic sports cars that Baekhyun used to love, there's a bouquet of flowers sitting on the passenger's seat. Bright, bright purples and blues, shades I'm surprised to find in nature whenever I encounter them. They are just as shocking now, and not just for their colour. 

"Are those for me?" I ask as Baekhyun opens the door. He nods, and I step forward to pick them up. I touch the petals gingerly as if the colour might rub off on my fingers. "You've never given me flowers before." 

"I didn't do a lot of things before," he says. Like, say goodbye. He clears his throat, clears away the memory, and the sound runs through my veins deep and heavy. I cradle the flowers in the crook of my arm and wait. "Don't you want to know what they mean?" 

"Sure, okay. What do they mean?" They're hyacinths, I think, not carnations or roses or gerbera daisies. They are special, and my stomach turns, already imagining their slow and inevitable death. 

"Beginnings," Baekhyun says. The word rings in my ear, but before I can react, Baekhyun's gone, walking around the car to the other side. 

So I follow. I get through the open door and buckle my seatbelt and hold the flowers on my lap, afraid to put them on the floor, where my feet might hasten their expiration date. Baekhyun smiles at me but doesn't say anything, and then his eyes are on the road, concentrating on taking us out of downtown and onto the freeway. 

"Where are we going?" I ask him, but he shakes his head. 

"It's a surprise," he says. The first time he ever surprised me, he got tickets for a helicopter tour of London. I was petrified, squeezing his hand too tight the whole time, and moments after we landed, I vomited into a trash can. 

"Is it going to make me throw up?" I ask. I worry for a second that he won't remember, that he'll think I'm silly or gross, but then he grins. 

"I hope not," he says, raising an eyebrow. "We're not going up quite that high." 

"Hmm." I lean back in my seat and look at the other drivers moving around us on the freeway. Are they going home at the end of a long workday, eager to see their families and kids? Maybe they work the night shift, and their day is just beginning. Or maybe the end of their journey isn't in sight yet - maybe they're just passing through. 

I've always thought it strange that people come to Seoul on vacation. Seoul has never been a destination for me: it's been home. It's cookie-cutter houses and manicured lawns and my mother's warm hugs and my dad's loud belly laugh.

"Have you been here before?" Baekhyun asks me as he turns into a small parking lot. 

"No," I say. In front of us is a park and in the distance, downtown Seoul, the sunset glinting off of its glass buildings. 

"This is one of my favourite places in the city," Baekhyun says as he turns off the engine. "I've been to a lot of parks, but this one's the best." 

"Why do you say that?" Baekhyun's traveled the world. He's been to Europe, South America, all over Asia - and this is the best park he's ever seen? 

"You'll see." He gestures with his hand for me to follow him out of the car. I leave the flowers on the seat. 

We walk through the parking lot and onto the paved path, which leads us into the park. Its fields are dotted with trees and dogs playing fetch with their owners. This is not a tourist park: this is a place for locals, and I can't help but wonder how Baekhyun found it. 

"So you've been in Seoul a lot, then?" I ask, glancing at him as we walk. 

"A bit," he says. "I moved here from Bucheon a while ago."

"Right." My brain tells me that I knew this, that I read it in a tabloid a while back, below pictures of Baekhyun leaving some hip restaurant in Gangnam, but maybe I never truly understood what it meant - that Baekhyun and I've been in the same city, sharing the same space before, and it took us this long to find our way back to each other. 

As if reading my mind, Baekhyun says, "I'm sorry I never called you before. But I wasn't ready. Or I thought I was over you." He shakes his head and runs a frustrated hand through his hair. "It was weird. I was with Yeji for so long and I thought she was the one and then - she wasn't. And my mind kept going back to you." 

His ex-girlfriend, the famous model he dated for nearly a year a half. I saw their relationship go down in flames alongside the rest of the grocery store checkout line, none of us able to look away. But I know that none of that matters now. 

"I thought I was over you, too," I say, an amended version of what I've always told myself. Now I know better. Now I see clearer. 

Baekhyun steps closer to me, his shoulder brushing against mine. "But you're not?"

"I'm not." 

We don't say anything else as we walk through the park. I try to focus on my surroundings, on this little bit of nature within the concrete city, but all I can think about is Baekhyun. I want to move closer, to feel the warmth of him against my skin, but I'm scared of the jump. Baekhyun leads me to the edge of the park, where we sit down on a bench. Downtown Seoul spreads out before us, monstrous and metal and beautiful in its way. Sometimes when I draw Seoul it's a city of labyrinthine varicose veins and it's clogged by congestion, but it is beautiful in its way. In so many ways it's home to so many, among them the man sitting beside me right now. 

I look at the skyline of downtown and to Baekhyun, who meets my eyes.

"You like it?" he asks. When I nod, his eyes light up. "I knew you would." 

I smile and turn away from him, back to the city. Seoul changes and it doesn't change, just like Baekhyun. I spent four years outside the city, and when I returned, the things I loved about it were still there. And the same goes for Baekhyun: my heart beats faster for his smile and my body longs to feel his touch. I can answer Taeson's question now. The things I once loved are still here, and so are the feelings. 

"Do you remember where we were when I told you I loved you?" Baekhyun asks after a few minutes. I look at his hands sitting still on his lap. Baekhyun has never been nervous about feelings. I've always been jealous of that. 

"Sure I do," I say. Greenwich at Christmas time, an absolute madhouse. But it was an experience, Baekhyun had said, that I had to have. I hated every minute of it, up until Baekhyun pulled me into a doorway of a clothing store and sheltered me from the wind with his body and said, "I love you," like it wasn't something I already knew or felt. 

But I don't say any of that out loud. Instead, I say, "Greenwich Park at Christmas time." I watch Baekhyun's mouth quirk as he relives the memory. 

"Yeah," he says. "But that isn't where I wanted to tell you. I wanted it to be somewhere more special, in Kensington Gardens or before or something. But I thought too hard about it for days, and then I couldn't wait any longer." His hands clench into fists in his lap. I wish I was as familiar with their language as I once was. 

"You know I never cared about any of that," I say. "Grand romantic gestures and things like that." 

Baekhyun shrugs, the weight of this regret heavy on his shoulders. "I guess I knew that but after our first kiss was so-" 

I laugh at the memory, Krystal stumbling into us in the dimly lit hallway, tripping over herself in her intoxicated state. 

Baekhyun smiles slightly before continuing. "As soon as I said it, I wished I could take it back. Not because I didn't feel it - it was the biggest feeling I'd ever felt - but because I didn't say it the way I wanted to." 

I want to reach out and grab his hand and press it to my heart so that he can read with his fingertips that my scars have healed. You didn't break me, I want to say. And I want to feel that his scars have healed too. But instead, I say, "That doesn't matter, Baekhyun. Then and now. That moment was special and it meant something, and I'm going to remember it forever. Not that we were at Greenwich Park and it was freezing and loud, but that you said you loved me. That's the important part." 

"How do you decide which parts are the important ones?" 

"You don't decide. You just know." 

I forget about the view before us as I look at Baekhyun. This is an important moment: just after sunset on a bench in a park, I reach across the vast space between us and take Baekhyun's hand. He looks at me, surprised, and then he smiles, and for a second it feels too easy, too fast. But I know that none of that matters because it feels right.

And it feels right when, as we walk back to his car with our hands entwined, I look up at him and ask him back to mine for drinks. I feel energy sparking between us as we weave through the city as it grows dark around us. We weave our own path, one that's just for us. Seoul is new when I see it with Baekhyun by my side. It's new and its home and it's what I've been waiting for. 

In my apartment, the box of memories sits on the dining table. Every morning for the past weeks I've walked past it and considered throwing the things inside it away. What good is preserving a lost past when the future is wide open right in front of you? But when Baekhyun eyes it as soon as we walk in, I don't pull him away from it. Maybe this is something that we need to do together. So I grab two beers from the fridge and sit down across from him. The beer sweats in my hand and the wood of the chair digs into my back, and I wait. 

"I can't believe you kept all of this," Baekhyun says. He reaches inside the box, then draws his hand back, as if he's afraid to disturb its contents. "I never took you for the sentimental type." 

"I don't think I am, usually," I say. Baekhyun looks away from the box, his eyes meeting mine. "But it's hard to let go of things that used to be so important." 

I wait for Baekhyun to reach into the box and pull out the matchbook from a bar where we drank too much and ended up falling asleep in the taxi afterward. I wait for him to wave it in the air and say, "This? This was important?" But he doesn't. 

Instead, he surprises me, shutting the lid on the box and on the past. He accomplishes in a second what it's taken me weeks to realise. Then he stands up from his chair and holds out his hand to me. 

"Come on," he says. 

"Where are we going?" I ask. I imagine that the second my skin touches his, all the time separating the past from now will cease to exist, and unceasing current beating back back back and forward at the same time will sweep me up and pull me somewhere that I can't escape from. 

"Nowhere," Baekhyun says. "We're staying right here. But I want to kiss you, and I can't do it with you sitting down like that." 

I know that this is the spark I've been seeing in Baekhyun's eye all day, the one that reminded me of London's lights as seen from across the Thames. London, a city bisected by a river, yet undeniably whole. It's always baffled and dazzled me. Just like Baekhyun. 

"Are you sure that's a good idea?" I stand up, but I don't take Baekhyun's hand. It falls back to his side, but the expression on his face doesn't change. 

"No," he says. When he takes a step toward me, I picture our last first kiss, in the doorway of my apartment in London. My roommate arrived home just in time to interrupt it. There's no one here to interrupt now except me. But I don't step back. 

"I'm not sure it's a good idea," Baekhyun says, "but I know it's not a bad one. I know it's all I've been thinking about since I saw you again. I know I'm tired of not talking about it, and I'm so tired of not doing it." There are bags under Baekhyun's eyes and I notice them now and want to smooth them out with my fingers, smooth out the lines on his forehead and the cracks in his heart. 

My speeding heartbeat tells me that I feel the same, that I'm tired of turning over silences like rocks expecting to find worms. But my brain isn't there yet. 

"What will it mean?" I ask him. In my pocket, the necklace burns white hot. 

Baekhyun smiles sheepishly, reaches up to push his hair out of his face. "I knew you were going to ask me that." 

"You did?" 

"Of course, Yeon. That's in you. And this is me." He looks at me and I feel our year together in his words, and this past month, too. "It's in me that I want to kiss you and I want to see where things go." 

I swallow all the no no no's coming from my brain and let my heart answer. "And you want things to go somewhere?" 

"Yeah, I do." 

Now I let Baekhyun take my hand, and I let him pull me towards him. "Good. Me too," I say.

His eyes are a shining chocolate brown and when he kisses me it feels like all the times before, and it feels brand new and endless. The past hangs there at the back of my mind, but in front of it spreads the vast uncharted territory of the future. 


thathanagirl.blogspot.com

February 15th, 2018

Today I did my laundry, and I found an old, water-worn ticket in the back pocket of a pair of jeans. It's one of those things I held onto because I thought it meant something, but what means more are the memories associated with it. Memories of falling in love, losing it, putting it all back together again. That's why we make memory boxes: to prove to ourselves that these things happened to us, we survived them, and we're here now. And on and on.

I don't think that you can separate your life into acts. My teens, my twenties, it all spills over. I am a mess of every feeling I've ever felt, colours layered on top of each other, all spilling together. My story didn't end the day my heart broke in two, and it didn't end the day Baekhyun came back into my life. My story's ending has yet to be written. And that's the way it should be. 

So, reader, I give you this, my past, my present, my future. They are separate and they are the same, and they are always there, in every moment of every day. My story would be incomplete without them.

This isn't a love story. It's a life story, but an incomplete one. I'm still working on the ending. 

- S


Thank you for reading ♡ 

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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