THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26
A knock on your bedroom door woke you up. It opened, and somebody who was neither Chenle nor Jisung peered in.
"Merry Christmas, sweetie," your mother hummed lightly. "Are you up?"
"Mm, yeah," you grunted, pushing yourself up against your pillows.
She came over to press a kiss to your forehead. "Good morning."
"Hi, Mom. Merry Christmas," you smiled up at her, letting her take your hand in hers. "Did you and Dad just get here?"
"A few minutes ago. Your father's getting Chenle."
There was a loud thunk from above you, followed by a yelp and two very familiar and similar laughs that you recognized as your families'. You chuckled as your mom rolled her eyes fondly.
"I think he was successful," you snickered.
"We're going out for breakfast when you're ready," she informed you, squeezing your hand before letting it go.
"Mmkay." You yawned as she headed for your door. "I'll let Jisung know."
She paused, tilting her head. "Who?"
"Didn't Chenle tell you his friend was coming? Park Jisung?" You pointed at the room next door.
"Oh, I thought he was bringing Mark for some reason." She looked at you with concern. "Does Jisung like basketball too?"
"I... don't know? He plays baseball?"
"Oh. Hm."
* :✧˚ ·♡. ───
"So, what are you studying, Jisung?" Your mother asked, stirring sugar into her coffee.
The five of you were at a diner in the small town at the base of the mountain, you, Jisung, and Chenle packed into one side of a booth and your parents on the other. The car ride had been filled with you and Chenle filling your parents in on your various happenings from this semester, but now your parents seemed to have zeroed in on the newcomer.
"Cybersecurity," he rushed to answer.
Both your parents seemed impressed by that. Your dad spoke next, "And what do your parents do?"
"He's got an athletic scholarship, Dad," Chenle cut in before you could. You both knew what he was really asking about.
"Full ride," you added proudly. "Baseball. He's the pitcher."
"Really?" Your dad's interest was piqued—he was a bigger sports fan than your brother.
"Yes, sir," Jisung replied.
"The school doesn't give out full athletic scholarships frequently. You know that?"
"No, sir, I-I didn't know that."
Your dad took a sip of his own coffee, regarding Jisung like he was evaluating his investment portfolio. "So what makes you so valuable?"
"W-Well, uhm, I-I don't—"
"He's ambidextrous," you answered for him. "He can pitch with both hands."
"Switch pitcher?" Your dad hummed thoughtfully. "You know who the best switch pitcher in the history of the league is, right?"
"Kim Beomjin, sir," Jisung replied firmly.
"Has he passed your test, yet, Dad?" Chenle scoffed. "Come on, stop treating him like he's interviewing at the company."
"I was trying to get to know—"
"You were being a bit much, dear," your mother interrupted your dad's attempts to defend himself.
"Alright. My apologies, Jisung."
"It's fine, sir, really."
* :✧˚ ·♡. ───
You didn't understand why your mother had asked if Jisung liked basketball until you got back to the house. Your parents had brought a few more presents with them, including, kindly, a couple for Jisung. Except they hadn't been expecting Jisung, they had been expecting Mark, which evident in the gifts. Both Chenle and Mark loved basketball, so the matching jerseys for their favorite team would've made the perfect present, if it had been Mark receiving it.
"I'm so sorry, Jisung," your mother kept apologizing, clearly embarrassed at the mistake.
"No, I-I like basketball too, ma'am," he tried to reassure her.
"It's a requirement for being my friend," Chenle helped him out. "If only I could've made it a requirement for being my sister."
"If we got to pick, I would've made not being annoying as fuck a requirement for being my brother," you retorted.
"Language!" Your mom scolded you, at the same time that your dad warned Chenle to "Be nicer to your sister!"
* :✧˚ ·♡. ───
Your parents were gone again after dinner, leaving in a flurry of hugs, kisses, and promises of celebrating Christmas together properly next year. As soon as he'd shut the door behind them, Chenle turned to you, cynical disbelief on his face already.
"No way," he chuckled and shook his head. His phone rang then, and he tutted. "Gotta take this. I'll be in my room if you need me."
Jisung was already in the living room, and you plopped down next to him on one of the couches, dropping your head into your hands.
"Your parents seem nice," he said quietly.
"Mhm, they're really great when they're here," you agreed bitterly. "Sort of makes it hurt worse. It'd be easy to just hate them if they left us all the time and changed plans last-minute and were awful when we did see them. But they do all that shit, and then I see them and it's good. And it makes me start thinking that maybe it'll be different, maybe they'll really keep their promises next time."
"I get that." He seemed to be choosing his words very carefully. "But maybe this time you just don't get your hopes up. Might be easier on you."
"Yeah, probably."
With a sigh, you sat up, turning into Jisung's side and snaking your arms around his waist. He wrapped his arms around you as you buried your face in his chest, one hand cradling the back of your head. His other hand slowly rubbed your back, encouraging you to relax into his embrace even more.
YOU ARE READING
out of left field • p.js | ✔
Fanfictionin which a missed connection in the library during finals week turns into two weeks at your family's winter home with your brother's cute friend on the baseball team. as long as you and your brother don't kill each other before you even get there, t...
