Prismatic Souls Pt 5
Oct. 2nd, 2018 07:02 pmKyungsoo stretched luxuriously, slumping onto Jongin’s chest again when he was done. He’d been awake for half an hour now, but the comfort of the bed was too much, nestled between the warmth of the comforter and the warmth of Jongin; so he stayed, lulled into a pliant state. Jongin, it seemed, wouldn’t wake soon, and Kyungsoo wanted to make them breakfast, but then he remembered the gleaming empty insides of the fridge and decided that staying in bed really would be the best option.
It would be another hour before Jongin stirred, blinking the sleep out of his eyes.
“Morning,” he murmured into Kyungsoo’s hair.
“Hm, good morning Jonginnie,” said Kyungsoo, propping his chin on Jongin’s chest.
“Ow, pointy chin,” Jongin grumbled, pouting when Kyungsoo giggled. But then Jongin rolled onto his side (and Kyungsoo slid off him) and closed his eyes again.
“Oh no. Come on,” Kyungsoo sat up then, hissing at the cool air against his overheated skin. The comforter was puddled at his waist, and had slipped off Jongin’s shoulder; he shivered, curling up into a ball.
“Go back to sleep,” he whined, pulling Kyungsoo down. Kyungsoo draped himself over Jongin’s bare back, nuzzling Jongin’s shoulder.
“Aren’t you hungry?” he whispered. Jongin groaned.
“Yes,” he said in a small voice. “But I don’t wanna leave bed.”
“Well I-” Kyungsoo said, placing a kiss on Jongin’s shoulder, “will go make breakfast and you-” another kiss, “will wash up.” Jongin sighed.
“Okay,” he sniffled. So with another kiss, Kyungsoo rolled off the bed and trudged downstairs.
The dumplings, leftovers from last night that he decided to pan-fry, were nearly done by the time he felt Jongin come up behind him, nuzzling the back of his head.
“Smells good,”
“That’s what happens when the food you cook is homemade-”
“I meant you,” Jongin said softly. Kyungsoo blushed.
“O-oh,” he turned his head to look up at Jongin, his cheeks heating up at the bashful smile on Jongin’s lips.
“But the food does too,” Jongin added, and his stomach echoed its agreement.
“It’s a good thing it’s done then, huh,” said Kyungsoo, placing the dumplings on a plate. Jongin, in his infinite impatience (something Kyungsoo had noticed last night) grabbed a dumpling with his fingers, hissing when it burned him.
“Why does it hurt me like this?” he whined.
“The same way the soup hurt you last night?” Kyungsoo asked, raising an eyebrow. Jongin sighed, his shoulders sagging.
“Yes,” he sniffled.
“Then wait, dummy,” said Kyungsoo, handing Jongin chopsticks. Jongin complied, but dragged his feet to the table, biting into the first dumpling as soon as Kyungsoo sat down.
They ate in relative silence, no doubt aided by their hunger, until they were down to the last dumpling. Jongin stared at it, then at Kyungsoo.
“You can have it,” Kyungsoo said sweetly.
“But I feel bad,” Jongin said softly.
“It’s fine, Jonginnie, I can make more,” said Kyungsoo, twining his fingers with Jongin’s. They were so slender, elegant; long and slim, just like the rest of Jongin. He loved it.
“Okay,” Jongin said hesitantly. But then he swallowed the dumpling in one bite. Of course. But now that they had eaten they found it hard to get up. Well, Kyungsoo did at least, and judging by the slump of Jongin’s shoulders, he also had no intention of getting up.
“We need food,” Kyungsoo said after a while. Jongin opened his mouth to reply. “Real food.” He closed it with a pout.
“We just ate.”
“Yeah, the last food in this apartment. You know there’s nothing else there. I can’t cook with half a head of garlic and two onions,” Kyungsoo retorted.
“We could get them delivered?” Jongin said hopefully. Delivered?
“Absolutely not, Kim Jongin,” Kyungsoo sniffed.
“Why not?”
“They don’t know how to pick anything! They give you beat up fruits and bad meat and-”
“Okay, we’ll go!” said Jongin, an amused twinkle in his eye. “You look so cute all riled up.”
Kyungsoo sputtered. No. He was not cute. But he also couldn’t say no to Jongin, not like that. So he just stood up, squeaking when Jongin pinched his ass.
They arrived to the supermarket an hour later, and Kyungsoo was equal parts excited and intimidated. This was a fancy supermarket, with overpriced food, but it was all better quality, fresher. Any chef (or chef’s assistant’s) wet dream. He took a deep breath and stepped in, keeping out of the way of Jongin and the cart. First were the fruits, which Jongin stopped at immediately, and Kyungsoo had to stop him from filling the whole cart with boxes of strawberries. Then Kyungsoo wandered off, admiring the deep red pomegranates.
“Oh look, hyung, peache- Ah!” Jongin threw the fruit back, jumping back. It happened nearly in slow motion, the tumble of fruits, but Kyungsoo was able to stop them with his arm, only the offending peach rolling onto the floor.
“Jongin!” Kyungsoo looked over at him, his eyes wide. Jongin was still frozen, watching the peach roll farther. “What was that for?” Jongin held out his hand.
“M-moldy,” he sniffled, looking at his fingers miserably. Kyungsoo let out his breath, pushing the fruits back into a neat pile.
“Did you actually touch the mold?” Kyungsoo asked, shuffling back to inspect Jongin’s fingers.
“I-I don’t think so,” Jongin said miserably. With anyone else Kyungsoo would have continued to be annoyed, but the monumental pout and the glisten in Jongin’s eyes made his heart melt.
“Just go wash your hands,” Kyungsoo said softly, brushing the hair out of Jongin’s eyes, “And don’t scare me like that again, okay?” Jongin nodded, leaning down to give Kyungsoo a quick peck on the lips. Kyungsoo watched him walk down the aisle, skirting the fallen moldy peach, and rested his hands on the shopping cart handle.
He heard Jongin guffawing behind him.
“Hyung-” and a snort, his laughter growing. So Kyungsoo turned around. And he saw apricots.
“Yes?” He asked, eyebrows raised.
“Tiny butts,” Jongin managed, before dissolving into laughter yet again. Kyungsoo stared at him, because was he really laughing at that? But because Jongin’s laugh was so ridiculous Kyungsoo couldn’t help the smile tugging at the corner of his lips.
“Really,” he tried to deadpan, but he couldn’t.
“Look this one is- this one is just like yours,” Jongin said through hysterical giggles, picking up a particularly round apricot with a pronounced indent.
“Okay, put it down. We’re moving on now,” Kyungsoo said, biting back the giggle that threatened to spill. He plucked the apricot from Jongin’s fingers and placed it back snugly among the others.
“Tiny Kyungsoo butts,” Jongin repeated, burying his head in Kyungsoo’s back, his shoulders shaking.
“Hyung look! Cucumbers! My friend Baekhyun hates the-”
“Jongin,” said Kyungsoo, staring at the fruit in Jongin’s hand.
“Eh?” Jongin looked at it, then back at Kyungsoo.
“That’s…not a cucumber,” he said at last. Jongin’s face morphed into one of confusion, his lip curled.
“It’s not?” Jongin held it closer, and Kyungsoo had to stifle a giggle.
“It’s a zucchini,” said Kyungsoo, pointing at the plastic label on the display.
“I just saw long and green-”
“Mhmm,” Kyungsoo couldn’t hold back his laughter now and Jongin’s face fell.
“Ah, hyung,” he whined, “That’s not fair, this is your area of expertise.” He stomped his foot, huffing at Kyungsoo’s giggles.
“It’s-it’s-” but he couldn’t even get out the words. Jongin huffed.
“Yah, let’s just go,” he plopped the zucchini back, turning on his heel.
“Wait, I actually want some of those,” Kyungsoo sputtered, grabbing two and a plastic bag for Jongin to put them in. But naturally Jongin just kept pushing the cart, a zucchini in each hand, the bag sitting on top of the onions, neglected.
“Do you think you could-” Jongin looked around, then lowered his voice, “Do you think you could stickoneoftheseupyourass?” Kyungsoo stopped abruptly, cursing when Jongin crashed the shopping cart into him.
“What?”
Jongin looked up at him from the zucchinis in his hand.
“You know,” he waved them around, “Up the bun hole?”
“But why?” Kyungsoo asked. Jongin shrugged. “Wh- that’s what dildos are for!” And just because luck was not on Kyungsoo’s side, an ahjumma passed at that moment and gave him a disapproving frown. “Don’t laugh!” Kyungsoo whined, but of course Jongin did anyway.
“I was just wondering, that’s all,” he said, still grinning.
“I don’t think so. Cucumbers are probably better for that,” Kyungsoo said at last, snatching the zucchini out of Jongin’s hands. “Next time, we’re getting the groceries delivered.”
“Aw, no! This is fun,” said Jongin, poking Kyungsoo’s arm.
And maybe Jongin was right. Everything in the cart looked beautiful, the arrays of deep, striated red of the pomegranates, the green and yellow mottled pumpkins, the deeper green of the zucchini; even the waxy reds and greens of peppers nestled between the leaves. Kyungsoo had decided that morning that given all the sunlight in Jongin’s apartment, it would be a shame to not have a vegetable garden at the very least, so he’d picked pepper plants and tomatoes and chives and cilantro and scallions and oregano and radishes and basil. They’d had to get a second cart just for all the plants, a miniature jungle on wheels. And because Jongin thought they were lovely (they were, with thick pink petals freckled with darker pink, and a scent that nearly made his head dizzy) there were several lilies squashed in between the rest. The meat, stuffed in extra plastic baggies because one couldn’t be too careful (Jongin learned this the hard way, wide-eyed as Kyungsoo gave him a whole speech about putting meat on top of veggies), exiled to one corner of the cart. Kyungsoo was itching to get to the apartment, to sort it all out and see the bursts of color decorate the white insides of the great big fridge, and the packets and cans and boxes neatly organized in the pantry. At last, they picked out some munchies, mostly junk that Kyungsoo refused to even look at but secretly enjoyed. He couldn’t admit that his own highly refined culinary taste would be marred by honey butter chips and pepero.
And then, because they could and they wanted to, they just meandered through the aisles, pointing out outrageous colors (causing quite a few traffic jams in the narrower aisles) and taking in properly, for the first time, a bit of the world in its full spectrum.
But when they reached the apartment Kyungsoo realized, one foot in the door and eyes wide in horror, that they had forgotten a key ingredient.
“Shit.”
“Hm?” Jongin turned around, brow creased.
“We didn’t get kimchi,” he groaned, “Not even something I could use until I raided the fridge at my place.”
“We could go to the corner store-”
“Absolutely not, that stuff is garbage,” Kyungsoo whined, stomping his foot. “I guess I’ll cook non-Korean food for now.” Jongin perked up.
“That’s okay! I don’t think I’ve tried proper foreign food. Shake Shack aside,” he said with a wink. Kyungsoo narrowed his eyes at him.
“Go put the lilies in water,” Kyungsoo grumbled. Jongin grinned at him, giving him a soft kiss on the cheek, before he skipped over to the flowers. Cute. Stupidly cute. Kyungsoo loved it.
-
“I think-” Jongin paused, spread-eagled on the mattress.
“Hmm?” Kyungsoo sat at the edge of the bed, flattening the creases on the comforter.
“I think maybe the apartment decor needs an upgrade,” Jongin finished, rolling onto his stomach. Kyungsoo brightened at that, a heart-shaped smile growing on his lips.
“Oh?”
“Yeah, I mean, I think Manager-hyung probably had something to do with it but the apartment is so-” Jongin sniffed, “bland. It needs color.”
“It could…” Kyungsoo trailed off, grinning at the unamused look on Jongin’s face.
“Oh come off it, I know you want it to be more colorful too,” Jongin grumbled, and ah- that dorky guffaw. Kyungsoo was too cute for his own good.
“Okay, fine, I do,” said Kyungsoo with a sigh. Jongin pulled Kyungsoo close, so that Kyungsoo was sitting fully on the bed, and then lay his head on Kyungsoo’s lap.
“It’s so odd,” Jongin sighed, “It’s like I just can’t quite get enough of it now. To think that I’d gone all these years in monochrome and now-” but then Kyungsoo began to play with Jongin’s hair and all the thoughts slipped out of his mind.
“I know. I feel like I need to see all the most colorful things, to drink them all in,” Kyungsoo hummed, but Jongin was too lost in the sensation of Kyungsoo’s fingers in his hair. “I-I actually-” Kyungsoo chuckled sheepishly, “I already have a few things in mind to buy.”
“Hnng?” Jongin moaned, and Kyungsoo leaned forward to get his phone, “No, don’t move.”
“But how am I gonna show you?” Kyungsoo asked, and Jongin groaned.
“Okay, I’ll get the laptop,” Jongin said, faking a sob. Kyungsoo smacked his shoulder lightly.
“You big baby, you can just come right back,” said Kyungsoo, but he was giggling, his bright round cheeks pinked. But Jongin slipped off the bed and crawled to the desk, tucking the laptop under his arm. He handed it to Kyungsoo before he flopped onto the bed again, wiggling his way back onto Kyungsoo’s lap.
The light of the screen was blinding, but Kyungsoo lowered it, smoothing Jongin’s hair down until Jongin stopped grumbling. He pulled up the tabs, his finger hovering over a turquoise monstera print pillow case.
“Hyung, why don’t you look at stuff here?” Jongin asked, opening a new tab (clumsily, because he refused to move from Kyungsoo’s lap). He clicked on the pillowcases, stopping when Kyungsoo choked. He shot up, patting Kyungsoo’s back.
“Sorry, air- wrong way,” he said through the tears. Jongin kept rubbing small circles on his back, until the coughs subsided, but Kyungsoo still looked distressed.
“What’s wrong?” Jongin asked. Kyungsoo looked at the laptop screen, then at him.
“That pillowcase is worth 200,000 won,” said Kyungsoo.
“Yes.”
“Yes? That’s all you have to say to a ridiculously expensive pillowcase?” Kyungsoo squawked.
“Money isn’t an issue for me, Kyungsoo. And it isn’t for you either,” said Jongin. Kyungsoo was just staring at him now, but Jongin knew his brain was whirring. So he let him process it, letting it sink in, until Kyungsoo’s eyes widened. There. He got it.
“Oh.”
Jongin gave him a bright smile, but Kyungsoo was still in a daze. Jongin booped his nose gently, laughing at the bewildered and slightly offended look Kyungsoo gave him.
“Okay, well-” Kyungsoo cleared his throat, sniffling, and then wiggled into a more comfortable position, “Those are cuter pillowcases.”
With a hum of agreement, Jongin sidled close again, his head resting on Kyungsoo’s chest. Of course that was a dangerous thing to do after a dinner as exquisite as the one Kyungsoo had whipped up, with the excitement of the day now gone. He was exhausted, and everything was soft and warm and cozy. His last thought, before his eyelids drooped, was that it felt so natural, so incredibly right, to be cuddled against Kyungsoo’s chest, lulled by the soft beat of his heart.