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Hye-Ri's Sugar

oatmilklatte26
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Damn fuckers, now what do I do then? Is it really wrong to punch a customer when he starts grabbing ass?? I was fired again from work because of punching the fuck out of my customer for pinching my ass. This has happened too many times and I refuse to be assaulted again. I sighed to calm my head down, but then I smelled smoke coming from the dark corner of the building I was kicked out from. "Can you spare me one?" I asked. I heard him shuffle, then handed me a stick. "I lost my lighter inside." At least he gave me a stick, I thought. "S'all good. I got one." I took out my lighter from my back pocket and lighted the stick on my mouth. I saw him put a stick between his lips and I leaned forward to light it, but the dude stepped back. Like he was afraid of the light or something. "dude chill, i'm just gonna light your stick. light it yourself." i threw the lighter to him. I turned around to smoke, not bothering to see who he was. I was just pissed. Now I have to find another work, a well compensated one too. "Nice jab; the guy deserved it." He complemented. "my boss doesn't think so. Being grabbed like that isn't my thing. I feel sorry for the girls who work here and endure that. Fucking scumbag, and I he doesn't even pay well when this club is filled with idols. Don't be like that dick head or someone like me would give you a beating." He chuckled, "I'll keep that in mind." Then I heard the lighter click behind me. After that; minutes passed us and I was done with my stick. "Well, see you around." I told him and flung my jacket to my back, i got in my motor bike and rode off. Leaving the guy. .... Fuck, my lighter. ...
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1. Lighter

Rhea Hwang

I didn't regret it. Not for a second.

Sure, I got fired—again—but if a man sticks his hand where it doesn't belong, he better be prepared to lose it.

The club owner yelled, security dragged me out like I was the one causing a scene, and I didn't even get my last paycheck. Typical. Another day, another job down the drain for refusing to let men treat me like furniture.

I lit a cigarette to steady the rage pulsing in my jaw. The air outside was colder than usual, the kind that clung to your skin. From the shadows by the exit, I caught a flicker of smoke. Someone else had the same idea.

"Spare one?" I asked, voice flat.

He didn't speak at first—just passed one over. "Lost my lighter inside."

"Lucky for you, I came prepared." I flicked mine open with practiced ease.

He put the cigarette to his lips, leaning slightly forward, but when I tried to light it for him, he stepped back. Like the flame might burn more than tobacco.

"Suit yourself," I muttered, tossing the lighter to him. I turned away, exhaling smoke into the night.

Silence settled between us, thick but not uncomfortable.

"Nice jab," he said after a beat. "Guy deserved it."

"Yeah, well, my boss disagreed. Said I should've smiled through it like the other girls." I scoffed. "Screw that. Place is crawling with idols and suits flashing bills like power. None of them worth a damn."

He chuckled low. "Noted. I'll steer clear of grabbing anything."

"Good. Wouldn't want to knock out two in one night."

I flicked my cigarette to the ground and stepped on it. "Later," I said, slinging my jacket over my shoulder as I straddled my bike. The engine roared to life and I rode off without another glance.

It wasn't until I hit the next street that I realized—I left my lighter behind.

YOONGI

She never looked back.

Even as the tail light of her bike disappeared into the city haze, she didn't turn once. But Yoongi was still watching. The flame of her lighter flickered in his hand, casting small bursts of gold against his fingers as he clicked it open again and again.

He hadn't caught much of her face—just glimpses, blurred by shadow—but her voice stayed with him. Clear. Defiant. Unapologetic.

Tattooed arms. A lion with three heads curling around her left forearm.

He memorized the shape of it. The ink. The sound of her boots against the pavement. The initials engraved faintly into the lighter: HHY.

He wondered what it stood for.

A few days later…

"You were out the other night, right?" Jimin asked between sips of water as they waited on set.

Yoongi didn't look up from his phone. "Hm?"

"Some waitress knocked out a guy at that club in Apgujeong. Everyone's talking about it."

Yoongi smirked faintly. "I was there."

Jimin blinked. "Wait—for real? What happened?"

"Guy grabbed her. She broke his jaw. Got fired for it."

"Shit…" Jimin frowned. "And you just watched?"

"I didn't need to step in. She handled it."

He thumbed the lighter in his palm, flipping it open and closed like muscle memory. It was starting to feel like a charm. Or maybe a clue.

"You alright, hyung?"

Yoongi didn't answer right away. His eyes were on the lighter.

"I wouldn't say 'poor girl,'" he murmured. "She didn't flinch."