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이젠 다시 돌아가고 싶지 않아
It's a dream. It has to be. J knows that, tells himself that over and over until he can't make his mind form the words anymore. At a certain point, the fear and the horror are too much. That's how it always is. He never feels entirely in his own control when he does it, though he knows he is, he must be, to make these kinds of choices. Still, it feels — felt, really — like his hands do the work on their own, like he's watching from afar. It's a terrible contradiction — to need to be far enough removed from it to keep from losing his nerve, to be enmeshed enough to feel it so it has the required effect. To know the fright in the eyes of someone dying at his hands, palpable enough that he takes what he needs from it, held enough at bay he could keep himself from falling apart after the fact or from stopping before he was done.
It's a little bit different tonight. He sees them in the shadows, hardly more than shadows themselves, hovering at the edges of his vision, but there's no victim before him tonight, no murder to relive. There's just a visceral wrongness, like he's hovering on the edge of understanding, aware they're here and that they aren't. He forgets things even as they happen, and it's the last of it he'll remember when he wakes.
There's a car. It's a worn-down old thing, the best he could afford, but it keeps running in spite of that and the damage he's done to it — did to it, that night, going too fast — but it's not moving now. He's sitting behind the wheel and it's quiet and it's dark, and something is very wrong. It's the smell, he thinks, and it takes him a moment for it to click before he realizes he knows it very, very well. It's been a long time, though, since he smelled it so strongly, the sour metallic bite of blood in the air, flooding the car, inescapable. The window won't roll down, and he leans across the seat to try the other (and he wonders, in the back of his head, why he doesn't just open the door, but he doesn't), but his hands slip, the handle slick. The blood was already there, though. He knows that when he sees it, that it isn't touching the door or the seat when he slips that does it. It was already there — is still there, on his hands, on the steering wheel, mottling the passenger seat. He knows it's there when he turns to look at the backseat — too much, more than there should be, more than there was, and it won't come out, it won't ever come out. It's happening now, but when it happened before, he scrubbed at it until his hands were red, his cheeks and eyes were red, and still he felt sure it was everywhere, seeping between the fibers until the seats were soaked in it. And it's not real, it can't be real, because this didn't happen. S didn't die, he knows that, he's sure of it, but he must have, because no one can bleed that much and live.
That's the part that cuts through the panic, slices so sharp he can feel his skin crawl, his breath stop in his throat. There's too much. Is this a dream or was it a dream to think he fixed things somehow? Was he too late? Did he go too far after all? He's faintly aware of the sounds he's making, sharp gasps as he struggles to catch his breath, high-pitched whimpers of protest. When he leans further into the backseat, he's afraid he'll find a body still there, though he should be able to see it from the driver's seat, but he can't stop himself pitching forward, clutching at the armrest. He never got used to this smell. It grew familiar, but he hates it — in the same faraway manner in which he feels everything but abject despair — and he can't get away from it. The knife shouldn't be here, he knows that, he's absolutely certain of it, but then he's not really sure of anything. He left it in his rooms, he knows he did, but maybe he didn't. There's too much that he's can't say with any real confidence, too many patches of time he can't account for, too many memories he might have made up.
It's dark still and he can't breathe, bent forward instead of back, leaning over the blanket and draped over the knees he's pulled up to his chest. Clutching at the sheet, the sounds he makes are incomprehensible even to himself, almost inhuman, harsh, panicked breaths punching out of him as he struggles to get air past how tight his throat has become, past the sobs that start to shake him as soon as his body is alert enough, well before his mind catches up. He tries to call S's name, terrified he isn't there to respond, but he can't make it come out, can't force his body to turn. If he's alone, if it was real, if it's true, then he'll die like this, struggling for air like some of them did. The thought of that is enough to make some part of him want just to give up and let darkness take him again. "Please," he mumbles, desperate, unable to manage anything else. It's hardly the first time he's woken up (he is awake, isn't he?) in a panic, but not like this, rarely so pronounced and all-encompassing.
It's a little bit different tonight. He sees them in the shadows, hardly more than shadows themselves, hovering at the edges of his vision, but there's no victim before him tonight, no murder to relive. There's just a visceral wrongness, like he's hovering on the edge of understanding, aware they're here and that they aren't. He forgets things even as they happen, and it's the last of it he'll remember when he wakes.
There's a car. It's a worn-down old thing, the best he could afford, but it keeps running in spite of that and the damage he's done to it — did to it, that night, going too fast — but it's not moving now. He's sitting behind the wheel and it's quiet and it's dark, and something is very wrong. It's the smell, he thinks, and it takes him a moment for it to click before he realizes he knows it very, very well. It's been a long time, though, since he smelled it so strongly, the sour metallic bite of blood in the air, flooding the car, inescapable. The window won't roll down, and he leans across the seat to try the other (and he wonders, in the back of his head, why he doesn't just open the door, but he doesn't), but his hands slip, the handle slick. The blood was already there, though. He knows that when he sees it, that it isn't touching the door or the seat when he slips that does it. It was already there — is still there, on his hands, on the steering wheel, mottling the passenger seat. He knows it's there when he turns to look at the backseat — too much, more than there should be, more than there was, and it won't come out, it won't ever come out. It's happening now, but when it happened before, he scrubbed at it until his hands were red, his cheeks and eyes were red, and still he felt sure it was everywhere, seeping between the fibers until the seats were soaked in it. And it's not real, it can't be real, because this didn't happen. S didn't die, he knows that, he's sure of it, but he must have, because no one can bleed that much and live.
That's the part that cuts through the panic, slices so sharp he can feel his skin crawl, his breath stop in his throat. There's too much. Is this a dream or was it a dream to think he fixed things somehow? Was he too late? Did he go too far after all? He's faintly aware of the sounds he's making, sharp gasps as he struggles to catch his breath, high-pitched whimpers of protest. When he leans further into the backseat, he's afraid he'll find a body still there, though he should be able to see it from the driver's seat, but he can't stop himself pitching forward, clutching at the armrest. He never got used to this smell. It grew familiar, but he hates it — in the same faraway manner in which he feels everything but abject despair — and he can't get away from it. The knife shouldn't be here, he knows that, he's absolutely certain of it, but then he's not really sure of anything. He left it in his rooms, he knows he did, but maybe he didn't. There's too much that he's can't say with any real confidence, too many patches of time he can't account for, too many memories he might have made up.
It's dark still and he can't breathe, bent forward instead of back, leaning over the blanket and draped over the knees he's pulled up to his chest. Clutching at the sheet, the sounds he makes are incomprehensible even to himself, almost inhuman, harsh, panicked breaths punching out of him as he struggles to get air past how tight his throat has become, past the sobs that start to shake him as soon as his body is alert enough, well before his mind catches up. He tries to call S's name, terrified he isn't there to respond, but he can't make it come out, can't force his body to turn. If he's alone, if it was real, if it's true, then he'll die like this, struggling for air like some of them did. The thought of that is enough to make some part of him want just to give up and let darkness take him again. "Please," he mumbles, desperate, unable to manage anything else. It's hardly the first time he's woken up (he is awake, isn't he?) in a panic, but not like this, rarely so pronounced and all-encompassing.
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He softens again, shifting in S's grasp, leaning his head against S's shoulder again and gazing up at him. Even mostly in shadow, he knows that face so well, the particular lines and curves of his silhouette, the gleam of his eyes in the dim light. It's one thing to coax himself into boldness, another entirely to believe it. When he's lucky, both are possible. He's very rarely been so lucky in a long time, though. "It feels strange," he admits quietly. Better out than in, better shared than drifting through his head only half-formed in perpetuity. "All of it. Missing it. Not having played in so long. And that was okay for a while, like I said, and that was weird too. And being scared... It's all a mess."
For a while, he just didn't have the space for that. He was far too busy, even when he was doing nothing, adjusting to everything — to life in another time and place, life after killing himself, finding some way to live with the things he's felt for a long time and the new feelings the last months of his life brought, making himself accept S's forgiveness, dealing with the fact he doesn't have to worry about being out anymore. Quiet though his days have mostly been, a lot has been going on under the surface, and it's taken time, he supposes, for all of it to settle. Not entirely, of course, and he's not sure it ever will, but enough for him to face this, too. It's been there for a few weeks now, maybe longer, continuously tucked out of sight, but this conversation means he can't hide from it anymore.
And maybe that's for the best. He spent a long time alone and in darkness. It's helped, bringing things out into the light.
"It's like I've spent this whole time trying to figure out who I am now," he says, "and I'm still not completely sure."
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"It's alright not to be sure," he says, watching J in the dark, impossibly fond. He doesn't want to say that he knows who J is; that seems too likely to sound too presumptuous in exactly the way that used to piss J off before. S knows enough, though. He read it in J's journal, he saw it the first day he brought J back here, and he's seen it every day since. Maybe some pieces are still uncertain, but as sentimental as it would sound to say so, he knows J's heart, and every moment that they've spent together here has proven him right in wanting to give this, them, another chance. "I'll be with you while you figure it out."
He intends to leave it at that, but having spoken, it suddenly doesn't feel like enough. Pausing for just a moment, he takes a breath, considering how best to say what he wants to say. "And of course it's strange," he continues. "Everything got so turned upside down... You already loved piano by the time I met you all those years ago. But... I don't know. Maybe you'll be able to again. Maybe it'll be good to start fresh after getting some distance."
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"It's good, probably," he muses, "that I want to. It's not that I wanted not to play since I got here, I just... even when it felt weird not to, I didn't want it very much." There have been times he even felt guilty about it. After everything his mother did to give him opportunities, after all he did to keep them, it felt like a waste to stop, though the danger outweighed the guilt. He thought it did, anyway.
With a quiet sigh, he tips his head up again, brushing a kiss against S's neck. "That's the part I am sure about, though. You." It can't have been easy, he thinks, to have kept all that inside so long. Even the mildest of secrets can quickly become a burden, and that was far from mild. Maybe it burst out of S without forethought, but even so, J knows he kept it quiet for a reason before now. He must have wanted the right time for it, to wait until J could hear it, or else to protect him from it entirely.
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That slight sense of guilt is easily overridden, though, by how much it means to hear that when he could unhesitatingly say the same. He leans into J a little in turn, humming absently, nose brushing his cheek. "Me too," he agrees, soft, and since they've been so honest tonight already, since this is one of the less painful truths he could give, though still perhaps important, he circles back to what he was considering a moment ago, his words slow and careful when he starts to try to explain it. "I was just thinking about how... I fell in love with it as I fell in love with you. I always liked it, but it changed at the same time, I think. And then I lost you, and I lost that, too." This is the part he won't say: how painful it was just to share a space with the piano that was theirs, a constant reminder of all he'd lost, how he could barely stand to look at it, never mind use it. Then, here, he couldn't have afforded one even if he wanted to, and he didn't want to, first because this place didn't feel like any kind of a home, then because he all but decided to give it up for J's sake and J never expressed interest anyway.
"But you... I never loved you any less. And when I got you back, I didn't get that back with it." He lifts the shoulder that J's head isn't resting against, a lopsided shrug. Maybe, he thinks again, that's his own doing, the result of the enforced distance between himself and music, at least compared to how significant a part of him it used to be, but it's true all the same. "But I would so much rather have you back anyway. Without question. No contest."
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"No contest?" he asks, lightly teasing, but only because he knows the answer. He doesn't draw back much when he speaks, letting his lips brush S's neck, feeling a little more relaxed. It helps, being all curled up like this, which is good, because he needs that as he wraps his head around S's words. When he speaks again, it's much softer, more serious. "I'd rather have you, too. But I..." He breathes in, slow, steadying. It's only by sheer force of will that doesn't lead with another apology. He knows what S will say if he does. And there are things that deserve that, that merit his apologies, but something he feels doesn't, right now, have to be one of them. "I feel like I took that from you too. I... honestly, I didn't know."
It still feels worth saying he's sorry now that it's out, but he refrains. Instead, he bites his lip, giving a tiny shake of his head, a little embarrassed. "I thought you were just... being quiet about it for my sake. Not like I thought you were keeping a secret, just not bringing it up." It feels, now he's said the words, shamefully self-absorbed. S has been careful with him, taking care of him these last several months, but he hasn't done things like that, J is pretty sure. But then, maybe it's just easier to imagine S being over-cautious than it would have been for him to assume that S lost something that was so much a part not only of them as individuals but as a pair.
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Either way, they're in such a different place now than they were then, and not just in the physical sense. And perhaps honesty begets honesty, because the more he hears, the more he says, and the more he says, the more he finds himself wanting to say. It isn't that he's kept secrets — not beyond the ones he's finally shared tonight — but just treated some subjects with a particular caution, not wanting to set J off when he remembers too vividly how fragile J's very presence here seemed to be at first, not wanting J to wind up blaming himself when S doesn't blame him at all. He never realized how J would see it instead.
"It's the other way around," he admits with a tiny, bittersweet smile. "I was being quiet for your sake about the fact that I just... don't feel what I did for it anymore." With J still close, S lets his head tip a bit to the side, a tacit approval. Anything that involves having his boyfriend close right now, anything that involves this casual sort of intimacy, he'll take in a heartbeat. "You didn't take it from me. I just didn't know how to tell you. I was embarrassed, I think. You were always so driven, and I..." Trailing off, he lets out a quiet sigh. "It's not that I don't still like it. I play at work sometimes. And before, I figured I would at least get back to playing more eventually, but it's just not what it was."
His fingers comb through J's hair again as he closes his eyes for a moment. "But you didn't take it from me. Here... That's the other way around, too. I don't want to want it if it would make you jealous again. Being with you matters more to me. So you can't take something that I'm giving up."
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Because it stings, but it's warranted. Because there's a strange sort of relief in evidence he fucked something up, no matter how much S forgives him. Because he hates that S has every reason to worry about that. Because J isn't quite sure if those reasons still exist.
"If you don't want to anymore, that's one thing," he says, "but if you're only worried about me..." That isn't fair, he decides, even as it's perfectly fair. "Yah, I don't know, maybe I will — I was a little jealous because I thought you were still playing and I didn't feel like I could be trusted with a piano anymore, but —" He shrugs and sighs heavily, more dramatic than he means to be or realizes. It's hard to say everything he's thinking because he can't keep up with it, and it's difficult to express things he hasn't fully realized. "Aigoo. What do I even have to prove anymore? Of course you play better than me now. I haven't even been near a piano in half a year; I probably played better when I was a toddler."
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There still isn't much comfort in what he says, but it could be worse by far. S shakes his head, though, something a little sad creeping into his expression. "I don't want to play better than you," he replies. "I don't... I never wanted it to be a competition." For that matter, he isn't sure if it became one. More times than he would care to admit, he's thought back on that last conversation they had when they were still in Seoul, the night he went to see J, and how J brought up a story from their childhood, so early in their friendship. He can't be sure now if J was filing such moments away, letting resentments build and build and build until they simply overflowed, or if it was the jealousy itself that distorted those memories or brought those past conversations to mind. He doesn't think he would want to know for sure one way or the other.
Besides, there are more important things at hand, like countering some of J's other points and continuing just to touch him as he does. "It's not only that I'm worried about you, either," he says. "I meant it, I just... don't really feel what I did anymore. At least not as much of it. And you were always more ambitious than me, Jae-eun-ah. So much more."
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This time, he's quiet a little longer, toying absently with S's shirt. "I know," he says after a moment. "I wanted so much, and now..." He shrugs. There are still things he wants and idle dreams it would be nice to fulfill, but it's not like before, where it went from passion to obsession. "It's hard to be so ambitious, I think, when I don't even feel like I could hold a job still. But that's what worried me, too. If I play again, will I become that way, like before?"
It's not a question S can answer for him, he knows that. Only trying will tell him how it goes, and that's precisely why the idea of it frightens him. Even having made up his mind to do so, it's scary to imagine where that might lead. He sighs again. "I don't need it to be a competition. I don't want it to be. But you will be better than me for a while." His stomach twists a little as he realizes how true that must be. "I don't mind that, really. It's only that..." He makes a small, helpless sound, faintly bewildered. "I don't think I've ever gone this long without playing. I haven't. I've probably forgotten everything."
That's the thing he's hungry for, he thinks — not to be the greatest, just to make things feel right again.
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"I'm sure you haven't forgotten everything," he says with another slight shake of his head, fond despite the weight of all of this. "It'll come back to you when you start to play again. And there won't be anyone you'll need to impress, or who'll tell you you're not good enough. Just me." Just J himself, for that matter, but S doesn't think he needs to point that out.
Unsure how to say the rest of what's in his head, he frowns, quiet for a moment. "I don't want to play and have you think I'm better than you," he continues, voice a little softer, almost self-conscious. "Part of what I loved about it so much was... that it was ours. I think maybe that's why I stopped feeling about it the way I did. It wasn't anymore."
It felt like it was again for a moment, that night. J telling him to play a piece that inspired him seemed like the perfect way for S to try to remind him of what it once was for them, and for that brief while, just a few measures' worth of music, it seemed like he might have succeeded, that they might have recaptured a little of that spark again — with music, and with each other, regardless of what capacity that might have been in. That only made it all the more painful when J shut down again, dismissing him and them and that song's significance. Given everything else at hand, though, S isn't sure he can bring himself to say that. They've spent enough time tonight already going back to that last meeting they had.
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It hurts to hear, but in a quiet way, like an old bruise. He knew it already, really. It's hard not to. Even if S says J didn't take it from him, he's pretty sure he sort of did. He didn't help, certainly. But this is exactly why, he thinks, this is why it fell apart like it did, why music stopped bringing them together. He stopped letting it. S has never asked him to play better or write more, just supported him, whatever he chose to do, and J repaid him with vicious insecurity.
"I miss that too," he says. He was, he thinks, at his best back then anyway, when he was playing just to play with S or for him. "It was a lot simpler then. And better. I'm sorry, I don't mean to make it a competition. It's not fair of me. I never should have, I just..." He makes a small, helpless sound. "I was scared then and it's a habit now. I really don't like that. It comes back too easily."
He almost asks if S is sure it's a good idea for him to try this, but he bites it back. It's not a decision he has to make right away regardless, and talking about this is good. There's a lot he's done his best to ignore, and he doesn't like feeling like he's figuring his way through this, but maybe that's for the best. It's harder to hide things if he's not sure himself what he'll say.
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Now, it feels so fucking stupid. He should have walked away a long time ago. Again, S reminds himself that he doesn't actually know what would have changed if he did — the professor would still have been in the picture, after all, and S can't help but wonder now if he was part of the reason for that new competitiveness, making J want to be better instead of just doing what he loved — but he regrets it a little all the same. It isn't that he loved it less, he thinks, but he would have been happy to continue doing it without awards or recognition, much like he was as content as he could be to love J even when they had to keep their relationship a secret.
"Please don't apologize," he says, mouth curved in a faint, sad smile. "I just... I don't want that. I played because I loved it. And when it came between us, I stopped loving it. If you already think that I'd be better than you... then it's still there, and I don't want to be on the other side of that. Not again. I can still play a little at work when I feel like it."
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"That isn't what I meant," he says, sighing. "I think. It wasn't really about how good you are or aren't, just knowing I can't expect to be as good as I was after being out of practice so long. But if it's like that, if it turns into that, then that's why I shouldn't do it. It brings out bad parts of me, and I don't want to do that again either." It started with uncertainty, after all, with jealousy, and grew into something terrible he didn't know how to control. That isn't a risk worth taking. Even if it never got that far again, he couldn't bear if it damaged what they have now. Whatever S might say about not loving it anymore, it feels too much like he's stopping for J's sake, and that's unbearable too.
Frowning, he keeps plucking at S's shirt for something to do with his hand as his mind spins. "I have to figure out who I am without it, that's all. I already decided to stop months ago. It isn't worth it." Giving up music seemed like the only sensible course of action from the minute he arrived here. It's hard to face the possibility that wasn't entirely his fault and that maybe he can try again, and still let it go, but he'll do it if he must. It just isn't worth the risk or any friction when he already feels a little frustrated just talking about it.
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"It didn't always bring out bad parts of you," he says, noticeably a little cautious. He doesn't even consider them bad parts, really, having some idea of how rooted they are in insecurity. They've contributed to bad things, but who and what hasn't, really? He knows he has, which is part of what keeps him so careful now, not wanting to say anything he regrets or that comes out entirely wrong. "It brought out some of the best parts of you, too. Not... that you don't have those without playing or writing, because you do. But it wasn't always like that. It doesn't have to be now."
S doesn't laugh; he's much too worried for that. He just huffs out a soft breath, watching J as best he can in the dim light of their bedroom, trying to tell himself that this will still be alright. "I decided the same thing months ago," he admits. They've been so honest tonight. That isn't something he wants to give up, even as this seems increasingly dangerous for them. "I should've decided it a long time before that. So... you don't have to play if you don't want to. Or if you aren't ready. I will love you no matter what you decide to do, and I will help you figure out anything you need to. But there was a time you played, and wrote, and loved it. You shouldn't have to feel like you have to give that up."
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It's awful to have lost it, awful to miss it, awful to think of never having that again. But there's a sort of relief, too, in S's words. J hasn't thought, since he got here, about how S might love him less without music. He couldn't. But he knows there was a time when that worried him, too, and he's felt so often over the years that it was the only thing of value he had to put into the world, and to be reminded that isn't so, that there are no conditions on the love that matters most to him, is comforting and overwhelming all at once.
He doesn't quite realize he's started crying again, though, until he sniffles and hears the way his voice sounds, watery and wrecked, when he speaks again. "I thought I had to — yah, why again?" He sniffs again, indignant, and shakes his head. "Always crying. Big dumb baby. I thought I had to, though. Give it up. When I — before. And when I got here. And for months, it just seemed better. Safer." It's incredibly annoying, he thinks, to cry at a time like this, when it's hard enough to express himself without babbling incoherently. "I already felt like I had to, not because of you. But I don't wanna do it if you don't wanna do it because of me or if we're going to fight about it. If you really don't love it anymore, that's different, but it was supposed to be ours, and I broke it, and I don't know, I don't wanna break it again. I love you too much, I don't want to do that again."
He makes a tiny whimpering sound, exhaustion and frustration and despair all at once, though more than anything, he's irritated that the tears keep happening and he ended up sounding mostly incoherent anyway. Tugging at S's shirt once, he clings to him, huffing out an indignant sigh. "I don't know if I'm making sense."
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"You are, I think," he murmurs, because it's really all he can say. It's not the most coherent, but S is fairly sure that he can piece all of it together even so. Like he was thinking just a few moments ago, it seems again like they're approaching the same thing from entirely opposite perspectives, both not wanting to let their relationship fall apart like it did before, both not wanting to pursue music if it will mean winding up where they did before. S doesn't really think he would anyway. Before he got here, he sort of suspected that he would get back to it eventually, but it would have been for both of their sakes then, with him continuing largely because J couldn't. His heart wouldn't have been in it, though. He would never have felt about it like he did in the early days of his and J's relationship, when it was something that brought them together, that they shared, when everything seemed as full of promise as it could for people like them, despite the awful circumstances at the time.
Although it's easier to speak his mind when he's less worried about provoking an argument, it still isn't easy to make sense of his own thoughts, at least in any way that he could articulate. Maybe that's why he thinks he can follow J's, because his own are likewise somewhat incoherent. Taking as deep a breath as he can, he hums thoughtfully, considering his words again for another moment. What comes out instead of anything he intended, though, is a whispered "I want to love it again." Caught off-guard by his own words, the weight of it hits him hard, something he has to sit with for a beat before he continues. "But I think... stepping back is maybe the best way for me to do that. And I don't want to do it if we're going to fight about it, either. I feel like I broke it, too, you know? Like if I'd realized the damage it was doing... if I'd had the sense to walk away sooner... maybe things wouldn't have gotten as bad as they did. Like maybe you would still have loved it, too, if it weren't for me."
This, too, must be a thought he was just barely holding back, something vaguely present but unformed, clearly making itself known as he puts it into words. Doing so, though he doesn't actually start crying again yet, prompts an unintended sniffle from him, shoulders tensing like he's half-expecting this, too, to go over poorly. "I don't want you not to do it because of me. I really don't."
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"That's not true," he protests, though it's quiet. He doesn't want to fight or make a lot of noise, and S holds him so tenderly, so close, that there's no need to raise his voice. "It's not your fault. You weren't doing any damage. It's not like you were trying to make me feel bad, and it's not — I did that. I made myself feel bad and I took it out on you." His anger and resentment back then, he thinks now, was around S, not really about him. It was just him finding an outlet for a pain that was otherwise tangled too tightly around him. He could have just done this instead, talked, but no, he had to turn everything into a fucking fight or silence. "I would have felt bad if you stopped because of me then too."
Maybe some part of him would have been relieved, but he doesn't think it would have been enough. If not S, he would have found something else to compete against. For a year at least, it was himself, no one else, and that's an impossible fight to win. What went wrong, he thinks now, is that he was lost, and he wouldn't let S help him, and he got mad at S for not being able to help or knowing what was wrong. He was less coherent then than he is now, and, guilty though he feels about the way he was, he's not sure that's anyone's fault, but it's certainly not S's.
"You didn't make me like that," he continues, still petulant, still sniffling between sentences. "You just did what you could. And if I don't ever play again, it won't be because of you alone. It'll be because I don't want to hurt anyone ever again, especially you." What he wants, what he's wanted for so long, is exactly what S has said — to love it again, for S to love it again, for them to have that to share. They've done well these last months, been happy and gotten through the days without that to bond over or argue about, but he misses those days before everything fell apart. Before he fell apart.
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Besides, in an odd, uncomfortable way, it's harder to accept the idea that there really was nothing he could have done one way or the other than to shoulder some of the guilt for it. He's never done well with that sort of helplessness. If it was on him to any extent, then he can try to keep in mind what to do differently this time to avoid falling into the same traps they did then. It may be a lesson learned too late, but at least he'll be doing something, not waiting to see what happens and just letting it all do so.
"I feel like I did," he admits, and now his eyes do fill with tears again too, though he does his best to try to blink it back. His breath hitches, and saying this hurts, but having said so much already, he may as well say this now too instead of letting J take all the blame. "Do damage. I know I wasn't trying to make you feel bad, but I could see that I was. You were so jealous. At least, maybe if I'd stopped, you wouldn't have been anymore. I just..." He gives a quick little shake of his head, quieter despite his unsteady voice when he continues. "It was ours. I didn't know what changed, or when, or why, but I wanted it to be ours again. But now..." Again, he sniffles, swallowing before he continues. "This, here, this is ours. That's what matters to me. I don't want you to feel like that about me anymore. Especially not over something that I haven't even been able to do anyway."
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What's out is out, though, and it's better like this, better than making himself pretend it away. That's never worked for long with them. "I don't feel like that about you," he says, sagging against S, slipping his arm more fully around his waist, though the angle is awkward. That doesn't matter now. He just wants to keep S close — not even that, really, since they're already very much so, but to show him that's what he wants. "This is what matters to me, too, Sihyun-ah. This, you, that's enough. More than enough."
That's the easy part, both kind and deeply true. The rest is harder, parts of it still knotted up in his chest, bits of himself he tries not to look at if he can help it, a past he doesn't want to repeat. "I wasn't just jealous of the music," he continues, voice clearer, if still a little wobbly. "I was jealous you didn't feel like I did, and angry at myself for thinking that, and... I don't know. Maybe it would have helped if you'd stopped. But maybe I would have just found another thing to be jealous about."
That is, perhaps, another way he's doing better now. He may not know precisely what is wrong with him, and maybe he never will, but at least now he knows it's there and he has to live with and around it, not just try to hide from it. That isn't always the easiest thing to face, but it's helped, at least. "I don't know," he says again, a sigh muffled into S's shoulder. "Maybe it's because we shared everything until then, and suddenly I was falling apart and you weren't or didn't seem to be, that made me so jealous. Music was just the part that was most us, and then it wasn't mine at all."
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With J clinging to him like this, S can't curl in on himself the way he suddenly wants to, tired and emotional and scared, the first two enough to make it impossible to drown out the last now. He hates it, more, he thinks, at times like this than any others. J is the one who woke up crying, J is the one who had such a horrible dream. The last thing S wants now is to need to be comforted instead of comforting, or to seem distrusting or like he holds a grudge when he isn't and doesn't. He just can't stand the thought of losing this again. The past few months have been so good — not without their share of emotional turmoil, of course, but still better than they've had in ages — and yet it was a year, more than, that he watched their relationship fall apart before, helpless to do anything about it, except when he was inadvertently making it worse. After everything they've been through, after being reunited even after J's death, it hurts too much to think about the idea of winding up back where they were before.
"It wasn't mine either," he points out, voice soft and shaky. "After you left... Even before that, I was losing it. When it started coming between us, when so much of what I wrote... Not even the music that was mine was mine. What I still had was how it was something we shared." Of course his heart wasn't in it anymore after he lost that, too. Of course he doesn't want to go back to it now, when it ultimately wound up only coming between them. He doesn't love it enough anymore for it to be worth that risk, but maybe, if he's not worried about J making it a competition again, he'll be able to get a little of that feeling back. "And then I didn't have that anymore, either."
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He hates that more than he knows how to express, not least because he doesn't know if that time is really over. Just because he's doing better doesn't mean it's all gone away. He doesn't know if and when it will get worse again, or if he'll even notice it happening until it's too late. He still second-guesses so much. Still, right now, he's painfully aware that S is scared and upset, and he's not sure how to help with that. Maybe the right thing to do would be to shut up and soothe him, reassure him that none of that will ever come between them again. He doesn't really think it will. But when he can't always trust his own perception of reality, how can he possibly tell S that everything will be okay? It would be too big a lie. He can't do that.
All he can really do is try to be as honest as possible. He kept S too much in the dark before. It's better like this, if he knows everything, even if it hurts. S has told him as much many times now, and he does his best to believe it. That doesn't make it easy when he can hear the way S's voice trembles when he speaks. "That's the thing," he adds. "I just don't know. I think I learned a lot and that I won't do any of that again, but I don't even know what happened to me, why it started, why I got that way. So I don't know if I will or not. And if I started acting like that again... I didn't know how to stop before. I didn't know how to change it, and I'm not sure I do now either, and I just... I don't want to go back to that. Ever. Any of it. I don't want to be like that or hurt you or feel that way. I love you. I don't — I can't do that to you again." If that means he doesn't play again, well, he decided he wouldn't anyway, months ago. However much he might miss it at times, maybe it just isn't worth the risk.
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Whatever else happens, at least he does again now, even if there are things he doesn't quite know how to say or wants to ease into, even if it also doesn't seem worth it to talk about just how hard it all was for him. He knows — well, he knows now, anyway — that at least part of the problem was that he seemed fine, no matter how much he was struggling, but that last year was awful for him too, and the one that followed was even more so. It was just a different sort of awful. Talking about it would feel like trying to make it too much about him, or equating what they were going through when it was very different; he suspects that it would only hurt J, too, and it's clear that J already blames himself too much.
"I don't want to go back to that, either," he admits, head ducking. That's all that's really necessary to say on that front, he thinks, given the state they're both in already. "I don't want you to have to feel the way you did then. I don't want to... make any of that worse." He closes his eyes for a moment, a few tears spilling over when he does. "For me, there just... isn't any reason to go back to playing more than I do. You're here, so it's not like it's something I would be doing for both of us. I can't afford a piano, so I couldn't play at home even if I wanted to. I wouldn't want to play at home, if you weren't playing. I haven't wanted to write in months. My heart's not in it anymore, I guess. I don't think it would be, having it be... separate, for us." He loved it when it was theirs. Even with both of them here, if still music wouldn't be something they shared, he doesn't know that he would get any of that drive back.
The breath he lets out is slow and unsteady, giving him a chance to try to collect himself a little. He doesn't succeed, but it seems worth the attempt. "You loved music before you loved me," he continues. "Before you knew me. I loved it, too, but... never as much as I loved you. I don't want to keep you from it and I don't want it to come between us again."
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"It doesn't have to," he says. "I miss that, too, you know, when it was ours. I miss when it felt right at all. But just because I loved it first doesn't mean it's more important than you." There are, he's pretty sure, plenty of things he loved as a kid, well before he met S, that don't much matter to him anymore or that, regardless of interest, still matter a hell of a lot less than S does. There's a lot more mixed into music, and some of it is still too hard to talk about much, like how it makes him miss his mother, too, but he's pretty sure the point remains the same. "Nothing is. Nothing could be. And if I decide not to play again —"
Granted, it's still hard to say that. Even having made up his mind long ago, having the possibility slip back into existence makes it difficult to give up all over again, but that doesn't have to be forever either. He lets out a little sigh and shakes his head, thumb stroking along S's cheek. "It won't just be about you or us," he says. "I didn't say anything for a long time about it because it scares me. I scare me. But whatever happens, whatever I do... I don't want to let anything come between us again, okay? Me playing or not playing or whatever else, I won't let it. And if I stop for now, I can try again later, or I can stop if I need to, I don't know."
But if S already sees in him that spark of competition that contributed to his madness, then J doesn't see how it could possibly be worth the risk. Not, at least, now. Maybe eventually, he'll find his way back into a frame of mind where he can handle it, but it seems too much like trouble now. If it weren't for what he learned tonight, he doubts he would have brought it up anytime soon anyway. A longer wait is probably a good thing.
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And still he feels so fucking guilty for being upset at all, for thinking such things. Despite the fact that it's simply what he believes, it seems horribly unfair. None of it negates how entirely he trusts J. They've been together again for months now, and he thinks they've been as happy as the circumstances that preceded both of their arrivals here could allow. This, too, he doesn't want to be a competition. It doesn't have to be him or music. For a while, when they were younger, it was both. He can't speak for J, but at least for him, it was the happiest time in his life, even when it should have been the worst. Pitting himself against the piano now won't do either of them any good, especially not when he does want J to be able to play again. Having this subject at hand after so long is just hard.
Despite his determination not to say as much, the hurt in his expression might give him away anyway, though the darkness still provides a welcome shield. It would be all the more reason to comment on the rest, except S couldn't hold this part back if he tried, his gaze finally lifting a bit again, tentative but earnest. "You don't scare me," he replies quietly, and he'd shake his head if he didn't want J to leave his hand where it is. "And I think you should try it if you want to. If you don't, or you aren't ready, that's fine, too, but I'll be there for you if you do."
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"I love you," he murmurs, and he's utterly wrung out, but gentle, grateful, all the same. It's late and they're exhausted, and S is handling this with far more grace than J could in his shoes. He's been so thoughtful — always, really, but even more so this time around. It's clear to J that he's taken to heart the things he said in those first days when they were reunited, his fears and concerns. That's all the more reason, J tells himself, that he needs to do the same in return. It would be the right way to treat S regardless, but S gives him an example to follow.
"I don't know what I want." He purses up his lips, thoughtful, still leaning into S. "I know some things, but... I don't know. If I don't at least try, I'll probably always wonder, but..." Sighing, he shrugs, nudging at S's nose with his own. "I don't know if I'm ready. And I don't know if I'm just talking myself out of it because it's scary. If I try..." He eases back just a little, trying to meet S's gaze. "Will you tell me? If I say something that worries you or doesn't seem right? Even a little?"
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