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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER1 — The Trainees‎

‎"You're tired, not defeated."

‎The city never really slept — not Seoul. It hummed with dreams that refused to fade, even past midnight.

‎Inside a dim training room, the mirrors caught only exhaustion: one boy, drenched in sweat, still practicing the same dance step that wouldn't come out right.

‎Rian Lee, eighteen, trainee of a company no one cared about.

‎The small speaker crackled; the same verse repeated again and again until it became a blur.

‎He collapsed onto the floor, chest heaving.

‎>"What's the point?" he muttered. "Even if I debut, who'll notice us? We don't even have mirrors without cracks."

‎The door opened quietly.

‎A soft voice said, "Then maybe you should dance like someone will."

‎Rian looked up.

‎Framed by the doorway was Lira Faith Sandoval — the famous foreign trainee from the big company across the street. Everyone knew her: half-Filipina, all-talent, already a legend among rookies.

‎She held a water bottle, eyes kind but firm. "Mind if I join for a bit?"

‎Rian blinked, unsure if he was hallucinating. "You… know who I am?"

‎Lira smiled faintly. "Not yet. But I saw you through the window yesterday. You looked like you loved dancing even when no one was watching."

‎He let out a weak laugh. "I don't know about love anymore."

‎She crouched beside him, handing the bottle. "You're tired, not defeated."

‎Her voice carried something steady — belief.

‎Rian took a sip, unsure why his chest tightened.

‎They practiced a few minutes together. She corrected his posture, counted steps, encouraged every small improvement.

‎No cameras, no audience — just two trainees chasing the same dream under buzzing lights.

‎---

‎When they finally sat again, the clock ticked past 1 a.m.

‎Rian asked quietly, "Aren't you supposed to be resting? You'll debut soon, right?"

‎Lira chuckled, brushing hair from her face. "People say that a lot. But nothing's sure until you're on stage. That's why I keep practicing — fear doesn't go away, you just learn to dance with it."

‎He watched her then — how her confidence wasn't arrogance but calm fire.

‎For the first time in weeks, he smiled genuinely. "You sound like someone who never gets tired."

‎"Of course I do," she said softly. "But I rest, and I start again."

‎When she stood to leave, she said, "I'll see you on stage one day, Rian."

‎He wanted to ask how she knew his name, but the words stuck in his throat.

‎---

‎After she left, the room felt different — brighter somehow.

‎Rian stared at the cracked mirror again, and this time he didn't see failure.

‎He saw someone who might one day deserve that kind of faith.

‎He picked up his phone and typed in the notes app:

‎> "For her, I'll become someone worth standing beside."

‎Then he pressed play,

‎and danced again — not because he had to,

‎but because someone believed he still could.

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