ログインYerin had always been a cold and self-centered woman, preferring to keep her distance from others. She believed emotions were a trap, something she could easily avoid. Her life was structured, predictable, and safe from the chaos of human entanglements. However, all this began to change when Elliot, her first love from high school, appeared at her workplace. Twelve years prior, Yerin had been a silent observer, watching Elliot from the shadows, captivated by his charm and warmth. She yearned for more than just friendship, but her timid nature kept her from expressing her feelings. Instead, she treasured the moments they shared as friends and buried her hopes deep within her heart. The unexpected reunion with Elliot stirred emotions Yue thought she had long buried. Their friendship rekindled, and Yerin found herself hoping once again for something beyond friendship. However, her hopes were dashed by the appearance of Hazel, Elliot's ex-girlfriend. Hazel and Elliot had a tumultuous yet enduring romance since college, a cycle of breaking up and reuniting that seemed unbreakable even after 7 years. Yerin realized she was on the outside looking in, and it seemed impossible for her to enter Elliot's heart when Hazel occupied such a significant space in it. Jayden, a handsome and charming man who was also Hazel's childhood friend suddenly approach her. With his keen perception, quickly caught on to Yue's secret, long-lasting crush on Elliot. Then, with a perceptiveness that caught her off guard, he quietly remarked, "I noticed the way you look at Elliot. You care about him a lot, don't you?" He offered a surprising proposition: for Yue to join him in becoming a third wheel in Hazel and Elliot's relationship.
もっと見る_PROLOGUE_
My mother used to say that first love casts a spell that stays with you.
I remember the exact moment mine began.
It was raining. I was sixteen, standing under the awning of Westhill High, watching sheets of water drench the world. A voice said, “Here.” I turned. He held out a simple black umbrella. His uniform jacket was already dark with droplets.
“It’s okay,” I said, my voice colder than I felt. “You’ll get wet.”
He just smiled—that easy, sun-breaking-through-clouds smile—and said, “It’s just rain. I don’t mind.”
He pushed the handle into my hand before I could refuse. His fingers brushed mine. A spark. A current that shot straight up my arm and settled somewhere deep in my chest.
I stood there, clutching the umbrella he’d never get back, watching him jog away into the downpour. That was the moment the careful walls around my heart developed their first, fatal crack.
I didn’t know then that I’d spend the next decade carrying him with me. Quietly. From a distance. A story he probably doesn’t even remember.
But to me, he’s always been like moonlight on a dark night—beautiful, soothing, enchanting—the first warmth that ever reached the coldest part of me.
_END OF PROLOGUE_
The most controlled part of Yerin Lin’s day was the five minutes at 9:05 AM.
Her desk was a monument to order. Pens aligned, monitor dust-free, the single potted succulent pruned with geometric precision. The first hour was for parsing data, not people. Quiet. Predictable. Hers.
At 9:04 AM, she finished her first coffee. At 9:05 AM, she allowed herself one indulgence.
Her phone was face-down on the desk. She flipped it over. Her thumb went straight to the app—an automatic ritual, so ingrained it felt like muscle memory.
She didn’t search for his name. She went straight to his profile.
Elliot Nam.
Her breath hitched. It always did.
A new post. From last night. A photo from Grouse Mountain—Elliot grinning at the camera, his face flushed, a sweep of orange and purple sky behind him.
Nothing like earning the view. #AnotherAdventure
Her finger hovered, then tapped to expand. She zoomed in. Not on the scenery. On him. On the crinkles at the corners of his eyes. On the faint sheen of sweat on his temple.
She saved the image to her phone, her thumb moving with practiced ease. Then she swiped left.
The folder opened. Dozens of his photos, arranged in neat rows. His college graduation. A candid at a coffee shop. A hiking shot from last summer. Going back years—each one quietly collected, meticulously organized. A secret gallery she’d never show anyone.
The sterile office air shifted. She was sixteen again, standing under that awning. The weight of the umbrella handle in her palm. The shock of his fingers against hers. The way his smile had cracked something open in her that never quite closed.
She locked the phone and slid it into her desk drawer, her face smoothing into its usual neutral mask. The data analyst was back at her screen.
A flicker of movement in her peripheral vision. Her boss, David Park, was leading a small group on a tour. New hires. Her spine straightened automatically.
David’s voice carried. “…and this is the heart of our data analytics division. Everyone, this is Yerin Lin, one of our most meticulous strategists. Yerin, we have the new transfer from our Toronto office. He’ll be joining your team.”
She turned, a polite, empty smile already on her lips.
It froze.
Standing beside David, wearing a crisp new shirt and that same easy, familiar smile, was Elliot Nam.
The photo from her screen. The man from her phone. The boy from the rain.
Here. In her office. Joining her team.
The air left the room. The hum of computers, the distant chatter, the fluorescent lights—everything muted into a high‑pitched ring in her ears. Her heart slammed against her ribs like a trapped animal.
He was looking at her, head tilted slightly. That curious, friendly expression from all those years ago.
David was still talking. “…Elliot, this is Yerin. She’ll get you up to speed.”
Elliot’s gaze lingered on her face. A spark of recognition—not of her name, but of her face. Then his eyes lit up.
“Wow, no way,” he said, his voice warm and real. “High school. You went to Westhill, right? We had that brutal calculus class with Mr. Chen.”
Yerin’s mouth was desert‑dry. She managed a tight nod.
He remembers the school. He doesn’t remember me.
“Yerin Lin…” Elliot repeated, testing the sound. He snapped his fingers softly. “Right! You always sat in the back. You were, like, a genius. I could never get those formulas you whipped up.”
He didn’t remember the umbrella. He didn’t remember the rain. He didn’t remember pushing his shelter into her hands and jogging away while she stood frozen and fell in love.
The relief was so sharp it was indistinguishable from pain.
He extended his hand, his smile widening. “Elliot Nam. Wow, small world. It’s really great to properly meet you.”
Properly meet you. As if they were strangers. As if the most formative moment of her life had never happened.
Yerin’s body moved on autopilot. She reached out. Her fingers were ice‑cold. His hand was warm, solid, real. The contact was a jolt of lightning—exactly like it had been twelve years ago, except this time he didn’t feel it. This time, it was just her. His fingers wrapped around hers, warm and solid. The same current. The same impossible warmth reaching somewhere she’d long thought frozen.
“Yerin,” she forced out, her voice a stranger’s. A thin, reedy sound. “I’m Yerin.”
“I’m looking forward to working with you,” he said, sincere and easy, before turning back to David.
He didn’t look back. He didn’t hesitate. He just moved on, already part of the tour again, already fitting into his new world.
Yerin dropped her hand. She turned back to her monitor, her movements stiff, robotic. The numbers on the screen were a meaningless blur.
She could feel the heat of his presence a few feet away. She could smell his faint, clean scent of soap and laundry detergent. She could hear him laughing at something David said—that same laugh she’d been replaying in her head for over a decade.
The desk drawer seemed to pulse. The phone inside held a folder full of his face, and now the real thing was twenty feet away, breathing the same air.
She closed her eyes for a fraction of a second. Behind her lids, she saw moonlight on a dark night—beautiful, soothing, enchanting.
When she opened them, he was still there. Real. Alive. Oblivious.
The boy from the rain had walked back into her life.
And he had no idea he’d never left.
The hallway was empty. Late afternoon sun slanted through the windows, casting long shadows across the floor, but Yerin barely noticed. Her focus was on the man leaning against the wall, his smirk still in place as if he hadn’t just publicly shamed Elliot in front of the entire team.“That was low,” she said, her voice sharp. “Even for you.”Jayden tilted his head, amusement glinting in his eyes. “Why? Because I wasn’t nice about it?”“Because it was cruel. And it wasn’t about work. It was personal.”He pushed off the wall and took a step closer, his voice dropping. “Unnecessary, huh?” His gaze was too knowing. “Then why are you so upset?”Yerin’s jaw tightened. “I’m not.”“Right.” He didn’t look away. “You always do this. Act like nothing gets to you. But I see you, Yerin.”Her hands curled into fists at her sides. “You think you know everything.”He let out a quiet laugh. “No. But I know you.”There it was—something underneath the words, something heavy and real. She could handle hi
The strategy workshop had entered its second day, and the conference room was thick with the scent of coffee and tension. Yerin sat with her back straight, her pen moving across her notebook, but her focus was fractured. Across the table, Jayden leaned back in his chair, watching the discussion with hooded eyes. Beside her, Elliot was presenting the latest iteration of their market analysis.Then someone from the finance team raised a concern.“The projected ROI doesn't align with the timeline,” the woman said, tapping her pen. “If we push this fast, we risk overextending.”Elliot nodded, already reaching for a supporting document. “I understand the concern. Let me walk you through the risk mitigation—”Jayden leaned forward, arms crossed, and let the silence stretch just a beat too long. The air in the room felt suddenly thin.“You know,” he began, his tone almost lazy, “Elliot has a way of making people believe in him. Even when he isn't so sure himself.”The room went completely st
After being lost for nearly two hours, Yerin and Elliot finally found their way back as the last of the daylight faded into a deep, star-pricked indigo. The old stone path beneath their feet seemed to absorb the dying light, and the air had taken on a distinct chill that hinted at the late hour.Jayden was leaning against a lamppost when they walked up, its electric hum a quiet soundtrack to his observations. He looked relaxed, hands buried deep in his pockets, but his eyes were sharp and missed nothing.“Took you long enough,” he said, a familiar smirk playing on his lips. His gaze swept over them, a detective searching for clues in their posture, their silence, the space between them. “Getting lost together doesn't mean he'll stay by your side, you know. Funny how that works.”Yerin walked right past him as if he were part of the scenery, her face a perfectly composed mask. But Jayden, a connoisseur of human tells, didn't miss the finer details: the almost imperceptible tremor in he
The villa had grown still. Most of the lights were off, the distant murmur of the others faded into silence. Jayden stood alone on the balcony, the cool metal railing pressing against his palms. The night air was crisp, but the turmoil inside him made it impossible to feel anything beyond the weight pressing against his chest.He closed his eyes, and for a moment, he was twenty years old again.Hazel had laughed at something he said—a bright, unguarded sound that stopped him mid‑sentence. He remembered thinking, “I want to hear that every day.” It was the moment he knew he was in love with her. The moment he started waiting.He opened his eyes. That was over a decade ago. And he was still waiting.But tonight, when he closed his eyes, it wasn’t Hazel’s laugh he heard.It was Yerin’s.Clear. Un guarded. Real.She had laughed with Elliot on the terrace, her face open in a way he’d never seen. The sound had hit him like something physical—not because it was beautiful, but because it wasn












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