you rail tzuyu in the snow
You’re not a bad person. And you know how that sounds apropos of nothing - defensive, unscrupulous - but it’s true. You’re like anybody else: full of mistakes, but good, mostly.
You are also aware of the way she looks at you. None of that has changed.
The slight quirk at the corner of her lips. A flicker, a smirk. A game, all doe-eyed and deep dimpled - she’s playing the seduction one. It isn’t subtle, and you’re losing by proxy. So you’re backtracking, drawing your conclusions; you’re reading into the line of her jaw, the fall of her hair. Measuring the weight behind each blink.
“You were wrong by the way,” Tzuyu starts, indifferent. Through some act of divine retribution, she laughs. “Because to tell you the truth, I used to have, like, the biggest crush on you.”
She’s young, and - well, she’s a lot of things. A terrible idea. Incredibly off-limits. She is anathema, red tape, an original sin. You shake your head at her, smile fading - which for anyone keeping score, is an admonishment, however faint.
Because Chou Tzuyu, you recognize, is categorically, unequivocally: never supposed to happen.
-
If you want a read on your current dilemma, then this is how it pans out:
You’re walking headfirst into one of the multiple terrible, terrible scenarios you’ve probably had an anxiety dream about. It’s an ambush, really.
There’s the text from Mina, explaining all the ins and outs of her winter hideaway, the logistical whereabouts, and the pinched photo from the outside, the endless winding driveway, the clearing in the woods. The remote location, the unfussed snow, the towering trees. There are no neighbors to speak of, just seclusion and isolation and that makes you, among the seven billion or whatever, the only one who will know precisely how fucked you are.
The door to the cabin swings open on its hinges. You kick the snow off your boots, and the air smells indistinctly of peppermint tea.
It’s a cozy place, you think. A slightly rustic aesthetic. There’s a pair of skis decommissioned over the mantle. Mina, as usual, has good taste. You peek around: the foyer, the open living space, the wood finishes, the sunken fireplace. You almost make out a bathroom, through a half-opened doorway - and the kitchen, maybe, is nestled around the far corner.
You settle in, find your bearings, and start taking these leisurely steps down the hall.
That’s when you see her. Wearing a sweater that’s a size too big, draped over her frame - sleeves tucked, exposing the barest hint of skin on her wrists, her delicate fingertips. You blink once, twice. That’s a dangerous flare. The rest of her, this canvas of pale skin and soft, endless legs, the hollowed stretch of inner thigh-
Actually, you know what, you are going to delete that out of your mind; as far as you’re concerned, Tzuyu absolutely does not have her long, satin-like mahogany hair spilling over her shoulder, her bare legs poking out from under that bulky cotton blend, and she definitely, very absolutely has not given you a complete lack of boundaries, so it’s more than plausible for her to slide onto a stool near the countertop with her painted-toes peeking out from beneath the folded press of her thigh (the pedicure, really, now?) and look over at you like you aren’t perfectly familiar with that goddamn face. Those eyes, that jaw.
And her collarbone is out too. Ouch.
Tzuyu rests her chin in one of her perfectly manicured hands, and tilts her head: she’s very blatantly checking you out.
The problem is, you’ve recognized her immediately.
Which - god, the bottom-lines, the blurred borders. It’s been years. She’s twenty-three, twenty-four now, and as it turns out, she’s taller than you remember. She’s thinner, taller, actually a bit filled out too-
Right, okay, no. Just. Delete that image from the internal memory.
“Oh,” you breathe, because there’s not a single thing you’re sure you’re supposed to do. It takes a split second too long to put the brakes on everything in your brain and say, “Tzuyu.” It takes even more control not to tack an unthinkingly fond ‘miss’ to the front of her name - you’re a god-honest lost hope - but at the last minute, you settle for, “hi.”
It’s unnatural. She’s actually somehow prettier than you remember, and the tousled brown curls flowing down her shoulder make it worse. She smiles, gently; this soft-spoken, “hey.”
She’s at the kitchen island, holding a bowl of cereal and looking at you like she’s taking inventory. The strap of her bra is black, loose around the curve of her left shoulder; she’s barefoot. Any other context, and it’s your favorite kind of combination, basically: casual and messy and haphazard. Perfect. She’s so tall, christ.
“We’ve met a few times,” and she’s not even phrasing it as a question - because she knows for a fact that you know her - and now, well, you can see how that’s a problem.
“Yeah.” You drop your bags. “Nobody said anything about anyone being here, so, I’m just a little-”
“Relieved?” Tzuyu tries, and if it sounds conceited, you’ve imagined it.
“Surprised,” you amend, quickly. There is a massive amount of distance currently between the both of you - several feet and an island counter to top it off. That’s good, you think.
Tzuyu runs her hands over the top of her hair, a half-effort at putting it up into some sort of a ponytail, or maybe a bun. You see now that her nails are bare. “I’d heard from Mina,” she starts, “that Sana was coming here-”
And you watch, absentmindedly, as Tzuyu slides down off her chair. You watch her too carefully almost, for a beat. You want to follow the length of her legs with the same ease and shamelessness - like it’s instinct or just expected; it’s ridiculous and wrong to think, but-
“-with, uh, someone. She left it purposefully vague.” Tzuyu finishes, then pauses. Her gaze slides across you. If the awkward stretch of silence is weird, she doesn’t comment on it. “Then I heard the flight got delayed because of all the snow.“
"Just Sana’s,” you correct, and that’s not information you should be simply giving away. She just stands there, blinking up at you.
“Huh,” she says, eyebrow lifted - slower than is explicitly necessary, “so you’re like. All alone until she gets here.” She simply eats a spoonful of cereal, chews for a moment, and adds, “bummer.”
It’s true, in some sense. You sigh, rake a hand back through your hair, and your jacket falls further down on one of your shoulders; she drops her gaze down, almost imperceptibly, following the motion.
There is definitely a point where you could take notice of a lot of things, and they include, but are certainly not limited to: the fucking languor with which she is licking the yogurt off the back of her spoon, her stupidly long eyelashes fanning on the tops of her cheeks when she glances down, the frankly risque neckline of her sweater. Those kinds of things. Those kinds of details. Really, you wouldn’t dare.
“It sounds like she’ll be getting in tomorrow evening,” you decide to inform her, though she didn’t ask, and now she nods, focusing still on the yogurt and granola at the bottom of her bowl.
You walk into the kitchen. Rap your knuckles on the countertop. Tzuyu’s right there, and your mind is filling up with images you could really do without. That’s the unfortunate, traitorous nature of all this: in any universe, Chou Tzuyu fawns over you. And she will, on accident or purpose, test you. And as for your hesitation - that’s an instinct that gets activated every time you so much as meet Tzuyu in person, this invasive little impulse.
“Well,” Tzuyu says, way too casually. “It’s just us then.”
“Yeah.” you agree, stilted. “Just us.”
“There’s wine,” she decides, tilts her head. Then, matter of factly, “and coffee, hot cocoa. Mina’s more or less stocked on everything.”
Her voice hits the room all nice, sweet, syrupy - god, fuck, maybe there’s a window or a door here somewhere that you’re supposed to open to clear the air, but when you look, there’s frost on the glass; it’s the subalpine frigidity. Tzuyu flashes you this other sort of glance - her teeth scrape the rounded spoon’s tip before her lips fully fix around it. The drowsy, delirious feeling is almost involuntary at this point.
“I should unpack my things, is what I should do, probably,” and now you are saying things for the sake of saying them, as an escape. “Hey, seriously. Sorry for the inconvenience.”
“Don’t be,” she tells you. “The weather isn’t anybody’s fault.”
(Here, a premonition. You look at Tzuyu, who raises an eyebrow back.)
The next logical move is: leave. Tzuyu folds her long limbs back up onto the stool, and you’re - trying not to look. You’re also trying not to do it consciously, actively - you’re not, and not. You fail, like you did a few years ago, too - the eyes have a bad habit of wandering. She’s made of porcelain, all thin wrists, thin neck, soft curves and delicate lines. She’s made out of glass - she’s at her most dangerous when you’ve gone and broken her.
It’s possible, you think, she could break you too.
-
Look, contextually - it’s Murphy’s law, or maybe your own very specific curse. A lot of stuff happens, so here’s a rough draft, your best effort at an approximation, a smudged-pencil sketch:
Tzuyu has been on vacation in the Alps from the start of the week, or maybe the week prior - she’s alone in this stupidly big cabin you’re supposed to be meeting Sana in for two weeks and change of pure unadulterated, hedonistic fun. Skiing, lounging, stargazing, drinking, screwing, consummating a situationship. You know the drill.
However there ends up being an actual, literal avalanche - with snow and rocks and ice and whatever the fuck - the power goes out, and you can only assume the whole mountain’s gone dark. It’s like a classic, a cautionary tale: hey, dude, you’re on vacation with this drop-dead gorgeous girl who will let you do whatever you want to her - in the name of love and lust and a loosely legal liability. She says she’ll be yours forever, except you also heard her say that the universe is entitled to laugh at you, a bit - so you do something you’ll regret (which, okay, you’ve done countless things you’ll regret) and now you’re getting punished for it, and so is the stunning temptress currently shivering in the bed next to you. Seriously, whatever you do, do not fuck her, don’t let her get too attached, because oh, man - Tzuyu really likes to make herself comfortable, huh? To nestle herself into your arms, let her hand stroke circles in the dark fabric of your t-shirt, warm her cold nose into your chest, and cuddle the night away. She’s so easy to give in to, isn’t she? This walking, talking paradox of everything she’s not supposed to be and everything she’ll willingly do anyway - there’s her expression, placid and rapturous in equal measures, the sleepy mumbles against your skin that sound like prayers, her damp breaths.
You should know better. You should know that this is the universe, laughing its ass off at you.
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