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  DIMMED LIGHTS

  ON STAGE TRILOGY

  B O O K T H R E E

  N A M I A R T O P I T

  Content Warning

  This book, and especially the trilogy as a whole, contains themes that might not be suitable for all audiences. Including and not limited to: profanity, nudity, explicit sex, mental health issues such as PTSD, violence, and substance abuse.

  Please proceed with caution.

  Copyright © 2022 Namiar Topit

  All rights reserved

  Edited by L. Jo King

  Cover design by Fay Lane

  Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, businesses, and events are a product of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  For Joe,

  I swear I named the character before I met you

  Contents

  PROLOGUE: One Man War

  Presumed Innocent

  Sharp Dressed

  Guard Dog

  Recyclable

  Last Time

  Job Description

  Too Much

  Almost

  Giving Up

  Strictly Business

  Coffee Incident

  Wide Awake

  Blissful Oblivion

  Addiction

  Bathroom Incident

  Love Song

  Movie Incident

  Tequila Sunrise

  Real Smooth

  Mile High Club

  Random Dude

  Worst Option

  Reminders

  Immediately No

  Complete Nothingness

  On My Own

  Heartbroken

  My Spot

  Important Realization

  Helsinki Incident

  Rematch

  Family

  Better Remember

  Epilogue: Fanservice

  Acknowledgements

  PROLOGUE: One Man War

  Chris’s Point of View

  Despite the hangover, the sense of freedom while I darted through the front gate and entered the street beside my house for my morning jog, was everything to me. I barely even noticed the footsteps of my bodyguard—Mr. Won—following closely behind. It was a mundane task to him, a thing we had done countless previous mornings, but I loved running.

  It cleared my head fairly well—and these days I really needed that.

  The road was bordered with a sparse forest. When the area had been put up for sale, I’d bought all the surrounding land, so there weren't any next-door neighbors. Down the road there were some, like the kind old man that had taken care of my house with his wife when I had been in the army, then busy with GRiD. But uphill there were none until the street ended.

  That end of the road, and the trail that started there where the forest thickened, was my goal. I took it slow at first, warming up the stiff muscles in my legs. But when I reached the end, I charged ahead full speed. The wind hit my face, and the refreshing smell of the forest after a rain woke up my senses. The rhythm of my footsteps erased the stiffness of my shoulders. The air up in the mountains was just so much clearer than in the polluted city below.

  The trail twisted and turned ahead of me, always heading higher and higher. My lungs started to burn after only a short while, but I didn’t slow down. If I was weary enough, I wouldn’t have the brain capacity to think.

  Not thinking was good.

  Trees started getting sparser and sparser before I entered a familiar clearing. My feet slowed down at first, then I let myself halt completely when I reached the small, fenced view deck on the cliff. Thoroughly spent, I plopped down to sit, marveling at the sight that opened below me. The view took even the last bits of my breath away, just like it had done the first time I had discovered the place.

  From up there, I could practically see the whole of Seoul, at least on a clear day like that one. The countless high-rise buildings on each side of the lazily flowing Han River. The bridges that crossed over it. I could even vaguely spot the area where LBR Entertainment's headquarters stood. And the area where our dorm had been located until, well, that night…when everything changed.

  Refusing to let my mind wander even close to that black hole of misery in my memories, I focused on evening out my ragged breath. Meanwhile, my eyes scanned my surroundings—a habit that stuck to me from my time in the army. Mr. Won was on his phone, probably texting with his wife. Guilt stabbed my chest as I once again remembered he was away from his family, trapped to be my guard dog up in the mountains...while his wife was due any day now with a new addition to their family. Thankfully it wasn't me who had insisted that he would be here, but all the others that were still freaking out about Min-ho getting away.

  Sighing, I stood up and took off—this time taking it a bit slower—following the trail even further up before it started going downhill. Curving back, the trail ended at the brink of my neighborhood. As I'd have to go past a few other houses to round back at mine, I wore a bucket hat and sunglasses as a slight disguise. Not that it mattered, since no-one would've believed it was Chris from GRiD with the awful scars. The news hadn't caught up on that yet since I'd managed to slip out of the hospital unnoticed.

  As I jogged leisurely through the narrow, crooked, and curvy roads, the neighborhood was only starting to wake up. Most of the houses seemed quiet and still. I nodded to a man that was picking up his morning paper with a coffee mug in tow. I smiled when he nodded back—it almost seemed like I was already a familiar figure on these roads.

  The convenience store owner was just opening his shop at the corner and even waved at me while I passed by. I waved back. Maybe I'd get used to the quiet life around there, in the mountains, away from the hustle and bustle of central Seoul.

  Maybe I should just retire once and for all.

  I jogged past the last corner to end up back on my street. Not a single one of my closest neighbors were up at this hour, so that was basically it for my social life of the day. For the rest of it, I'd probably spend inside the walls of the prison I had built for myself, away from everything.

  Apparently I hadn't tortured myself enough yet; I opened my garage door with the small remote that was attached to my keychain. Mr. Won simply ran past me, straight to the main house. He was probably heading to shower. I stepped in my garage, passing by my most precious belonging—a pitch-black Lamborghini—then straight through the door on the right to my gym. Glugging down the remains of water in my bottle, I tossed the backpack beside the threshold.

  I’d become used to taking out my frustrations on my boxing bag over in the corner, and I started throwing some punches at it. The unfortunate thing was that the gym still had one mirror left. It got easier and easier to put more and more power through my fists, as every time the bag moved too much, it revealed a glimpse of the monstrosity that was my face nowadays. And the sight, it just reminded me of what I had become inside too—a monster.

  It started a vicious cycle of self-hatred, and sooner than I’d initially thought, I lost control. Kicking the bag with full force, I sent it swinging uncontrollably. Of course, with my incredible luck, the bottom of it landed straight to the one and only remaining mirror in the whole gym, breaking the lower half of it. Miraculously, about half of the mirror survived, and only the bottom fell off to the floor, shattering into a million teeny-tiny pieces.

  Closing my eyes, I tried to calm down a bit, fighting back the urge to fall completely apart. When I found the strength, I started sweeping the floor, gathering the pieces of glass to one spot. Good thing I was still wearing my sneakers.

  A knock on the door startl
ed me in the midst of it. Mr. Won didn't bother to wait for a response though when he barged in, eyeing the mess around me. He wasn't even the slightest bit surprised. I wished he would've at least pretended to be.

  "Another one?" he asked with a nonchalant tone.

  "Yeah, I'll handle it," I replied, turning my gaze back to the floor.

  "No, let me," he ordered sternly and pried the broom off my hands. "You've got…um…visitors. They're coming up the street as we speak."

  I turned to look at the screen on the wall that broadcasted live feed from four different safety cams around my premises. Quickly my eyes found the bottom right corner that showed my front yard and the gate. It didn't take long to see what Mr. Won had already indicated.

  Two police cars made their way through the gate that Mr. Won had already let open for them. As soon as the doors opened, four armed-to-their-teeth policemen swiftly took their places in a stiff formation, mostly paying attention to the front door. Only one of them was keeping his eyes on the garage.

  "Seems like it's happening today," I stated, my voice as dead as I felt inside.

  "It is," Mr. Won confirmed, already focused on his task of cleaning the pieces of the broken mirror from the floor.

  "I guess I'm gonna go then. Can you turn on the alarms on your way out?"

  "Of course. And you...take care."

  I nodded at him and sighed. As unpleasant as it was to admit it, I had known this day would come the whole time. Right from that second when I had lost myself in a senseless one-man war against a lunatic. I wasn't exactly in the position to have the right to complain. Well, if you looked at the bright side, at least it probably meant they had finally caught the bastard.

  Presumed Innocent

  48 hours.

  It was a long time to stare at the white brick wall of my cell in the detention facility. It was even longer time to go in and out of countless interrogations and then meetings with my label’s lawyer, Jae-beom. But most importantly, it was a hell of a long time to try to evade small talk with an overly friendly, stinky, and balding ahjussi who was my cellmate. Eventually he’d resorted to intensely staring at my face.

  “Ah!” The old chap stood up abruptly, pointed at me with his index finger, eyes wide. “Now I recognize you!”

  I grit my teeth together. “Great.”

  “You’re in that boy band…uh…” He proceeded to shake that index finger of his directly in front of my nose and rub his temple. “Grind?”

  My jaw hurt from gritting my teeth together even harder. “GRiD.”

  “What happened to your face?”

  I closed my eyes for a brief few seconds to calm down. At this rate the whole cell-block would know who I was. If they didn’t know already. Admittedly this old chap was a little slow. “Ahjussi, can you possibly keep your voice down?”

  He jumped a little at my words and glanced around as if he’d only then realized where we were.

  “Oh, uh, mianhae,” he said, scratching the back of his neck.

  He sat down and kept quiet from then on. And just like that, the longest 48 hours of my life continued to trudge forward. At least the interrogations were over.

  48 hours was the exact amount of time they would be able to keep me in custody. Not that they didn’t try to keep me longer. They even filed a detention warrant on me so they could’ve kept me locked up until the trial, and I will never forget the exact wording they used to justify it:

  Defendant poses a substantial risk of harm to others as manifested by recent behavior causing harm and is likely in the near future to cause physical injury to another person.

  And I mean…fair. The police didn’t give two shits about Min-ho deliberately having tried to take many lives that night. We had both suffered injuries—and I did beat the guy to the pulp—therefore we were both charged for assault. That was the way around here. And they were right. The only difference between the two of us was purely…money. I at least had Jae-beom. Well, that, and maybe the fact that Min-ho was facing just so many more charges on top of the assault.

  I still regretted nothing. Min-ho deserved it. Annoyingly, that didn’t make me feel any less disgusted at myself.

  Jae-beom made sure I wouldn’t be kept in custody until the trial. It was a relief, I admit, even though I wasn’t sure I deserved such privileged treatment. The photos of Min-ho’s face that they had shown at the first interrogation haunted me. There was no denying that I had beat the guy to the brink of death, and I certainly hadn’t expected the…rage…that had emerged from within me.

  A sigh escaped me. Must’ve been the hundredth one for that day. It didn’t matter that I didn’t like myself very much at the moment—regardless I should’ve been released any minute. The problem was that there were no clocks in the cell so I had zero idea of when those fucking agonizingly long 48 hours would be over.

  My eyes were about to involuntarily shut down when one of the guards finally opened the cell and called my name. I don’t think I’d ever woken up so fast in my life. I was on my feet in half of a second, hands already stretched out in front of me for the inevitable restraints.

  “Eager to get out, huh?” the officer asked, letting me see a glimpse of a half-smile.

  I didn’t reply. If someone wasn’t eager to get out of a place like that, I’d be more worried. As the dude was locking up my wrists and ankles to the chains, I took a last glance around the cell, hoping to never see it from the inside again. Not that there was much to see. A window in the back, all white walls, a TV that only worked from three to five in the afternoon. The smallest bathroom with a hole on the floor and a broken door in the back right corner.

  “You’re awfully quiet for a guy who’s always yapping about something on the telly. Gay rights this, gay rights that…I wonder if you would’ve found a nice boyfriend here.”

  Okay now he was downright fucking with me. But as I knew that this was the last time in my entire life to do anything stupid, I somehow managed to stay silent. Apart from a quick “move along,” the guard never bothered with any more small talk—thank fuck.

  Under Korean law, I was presumed innocent until proven guilty. However, as the guard continued to push me forward, shackles attached to my wrists and ankles, I very much felt like a convicted criminal. Maybe I deserved it, though.

  The way out was the same as it was in, through a high fenced corridor across the yard and onto the building in the front.

  Once I was inside, unshackled and had gone through the metal detector—why the fuck I had to go through one going out of the facility, I had no idea—I was led into a room that I hadn’t seen before. It looked like it was some kind of a waiting area. Based on the posters on the walls about the rules of visiting, I assumed it was for visitors. This time there were only two men and a woman sitting on the benches. The woman was, of course, Jiwoo, who winked at me at once when I noticed them. One of the men was Jae-beom, who I had also expected. But the other man…was Joe. Looking as handsome as ever in a pristine suit. Not a hair was out of place, and his mouth was deceivingly set into a stern line that I knew was only a facade, because his golden brown eyes still twinkled that familiar but annoying spark.

  As usual, flashbacks from that night consumed my entire brain as soon as our eyes met. That night, his hair had definitely not been very neatly combed, and there was not a suit—or any clothing for that matter—in sight.

  Yet, the question remained…what the fuck was he doing here?

  Admittedly, there was also a small sting that hit my chest upon seeing Joe and not…well…GRiD. Was it wrong from me to expect I would’ve seen one of the guys there, at least? I expected I would’ve seen Tae. Maybe even Joonie or Minjae. At least Do-hyun would’ve been curious enough to be there when I was released?

  And if it had to be a bodyguard, why wasn’t it Mr. Won?

  Before I dwelled too far into wondering why my welcome home -party consisted specifically of these people, I was handed a cardboard
box where I had left my stuff on the way in, and a bigger bag.

  “What’s this?” I asked the front office lady, holding up the bag.

  “It was delivered to you earlier. Change of clothes and stuff, looked like.”

  Curious, I tossed the cardboard box to the side and opened the bag to take a look inside. Mr. Won had to have packed it before leaving my place—my phone, wallet and keys were right on top. Seemed like the rest of it was filled with clothes.

  It warmed my heart that Mr. Won had gone through such lengths, only to realize it had probably been someone from LBR Entertainment ordering him around. If there was one rule in the world of the Korean music industry, it was that not one idol would be caught red-handed wearing sweaty and ragged workout clothes in public. No, not even after getting himself locked up during morning workout.

  I asked the secretary if there was an actual place to change clothes. She pointed me to one of the public restrooms…ugh. I guess I was wearing the scent of urine and shit as a cologne for the day then.

  Annoyed, I yanked the door open and stepped inside. Swiftly, I made my way to the cleanest looking stall, trying not to concentrate too hard on my surroundings. The outfit was pretty basic: some black ripped jeans, a plain black t-shirt, and my burgundy leather jacket. Thankfully there was also a beanie to hide my mess of light brown hair, big-ass sunglasses, a selection of underwear—some luxuries not everyone would’ve thought to pack while in a hurry. One of the reasons I liked Mr. Won so much: he was efficient, didn’t invade my personal space, and handled everything with such a level of professionalism that it managed to surprise even me from time to time.

  After I was done changing, I jammed the workout clothes—box and all—in the trash bin near the sinks along with the bag. The clothes were shitty anyway, and let’s face it, I’d probably ruin them for good anyway when I attempted washing clothes the next time. The wallet I put in my back pocket; the keys found their place in my leather jacket’s pocket. I didn’t even bother to take a glance at the phone before stuffing it in one of the pockets as well.