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Chapter 7 - Chapter Seven: Footsteps Without a Voice

I didn't sleep after reading the note.

> "They said they'd ruin you if I stayed."

Seven words.

And every one of them burned through my chest like a second heartbreak I didn't see coming.

I stared at my own reflection in the dark mirror across the room —

a version of me that had survived silence,

only to discover it was never mine to begin with.

---

For three days, I didn't talk to anyone.

Not Joon.

Not Miyeon.

Not the manager who kept leaving voice notes like my voicemail was a therapist.

I needed to be alone — but not to cry.

To hunt.

---

I started with old messages.

Ones I'd deleted.

Ones I shouldn't have.

His voice memos.

Clipped. Hesitant.

Always saying too little — but now, they felt like warnings.

I called the last number I had for him.

Disconnected.

I tried a backup line.

The one he gave me once during a snowstorm when we got locked out of rehearsal and he said,

> "This number's not for emergencies. It's for truths you're too scared to say out loud."

Still dead.

---

I began asking around.

Carefully.

I wasn't trying to make headlines —

I was trying to find the person who used to warm my hands between takes and whisper,

> "Don't break for them. Break for yourself."

I went to our old studio.

Gone.

I went to the rooftop he once took me to after our first underground win.

Locked.

Then, I tried the music forums.

Anonymous spaces where ghosts leave fingerprints.

That's where I found it:

A track.

No title.

No artist name.

But the sound…

I knew it.

I knew it.

His guitar tone.

The way he let silence hang before the drop.

His breath — uneven, as if holding back more than melody.

---

I downloaded it.

Played it in the dark.

At exactly 2:18… he spoke.

One line.

> "If you're hearing this… it means they didn't win."

My whole body went numb.

---

I followed the file's upload source.

Encrypted.

But I had friends in hidden places — ones who owed me favors.

The trace led to an internet café in Mapo-gu.

I got there just before closing.

The kid at the desk looked at me like I was lost.

> "Room 3," he said, without me even asking.

I walked in.

The chair was still warm.

On the screen: a message box.

Typed, but unsent.

> "I don't know if I'm brave enough to let you see me like this."

My fingers hovered over the keyboard.

Then I typed:

> "I already did."

I hit enter.

The screen blinked.

Then went black.

---

A knock.

From behind me.

Slow.

Measured.

Like a heartbeat returning after flatlining.

I turned.

And there he was.

Tired.

Smaller than I remembered.

But him.

No lights.

No music.

Just the silence between us,

and a lifetime of unsaid things sitting between our feet.

---

I stepped closer.

He didn't move.

> "Why?" I whispered.

He shook his head.

> "Because they promised they'd kill everything you loved.

Your name. Your music. Your truth.

So I let them kill me instead."

He looked away when he said it.

Like it was a confession.

Like he expected me to run.

But I didn't.

---

I reached for his hand.

It trembled — not from fear,

but from the memory of holding on too tightly to someone he thought he had to protect by disappearing.

> "You didn't have to disappear," I said.

> "I did," he replied.

"Because if I stayed… they would've used me to destroy you."

---

I felt the weight of every song I sang without him.

The notes I cracked on,

the verses I skipped,

the lines I couldn't finish.

But in this moment,

I didn't want a song.

I just wanted him.

Not the perfect version.

Not the public version.

The real one.

Broken.

Honest.

Mine.

---

He took a step forward.

One inch.

Then two.

Then he was close enough for me to smell the months of fear on his collar.

> "Can I stay this time?" he asked.

I didn't answer with words.

I leaned forward.

And for the second time in our lives —

we kissed.

Not as goodbye.

Not as apology.

But as an oath.

---

The world outside still wanted to silence us.

But inside this small moment —

he wasn't lost.

And I wasn't alone.

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