Prologue
“Tell me about the moment it all changed.”
The question is simple. Too simple.
But Seola has been in the industry long enough to know that simple questions are never innocent. They’re the ones that sneak under your ribs, past rehearsed answers,
and sit there—waiting for the truth to slip out when you aren’t watching.
She smiles softly, but it’s not the stage smile—the one with twenty white teeth and the tilt of her head. This smile barely moves her lips. It aches, like something half-healed.
“It changed when I stopped pretending the spotlight meant safety.”
Her voice is soft, lower than usual. The lights above cast a faint glow across her skin, making her seem both too real and not real at all. Like a dream you wake up remembering,
only to forget the edges moments later.
The interviewer hasn’t pressed her yet. Good. Seola isn’t ready.
“I debuted when I was nineteen,” she begins. “Back then, I thought the hardest part would be learning how to stand still while the world watched. But the hardest part was learning
how to keep singing even when your heart’s breaking.”
Her hand drifts to her side, resting just above her ribs. As if the memory aches.
“They always tell us, ‘You belong to the fans now.’ And I believed that. For years. I gave them everything I had. My time. My youth. My joy. And… my silence.”
She looks down for a second, lost in thought.
“There was someone I wanted to give more to. But I didn’t know how.”
The room hums in quiet reverence. She doesn’t say Vony’s name. But her silhouette flickers in every pause, every breath Seola takes too slowly.
“She wasn’t easy,” Seola continues. “She didn’t try to be lovable. She didn’t care about being liked. And yet, every time she walked into a room, I couldn’t look away.”
Her smile twitches, betraying something close to pain.
“She was everything I wasn’t. Cold, composed, elegant to a fault. You’d think she didn’t feel anything. But I knew better. I saw her when the stage lights turned off.”
She falls quiet.
“There was a night,” Seola says after a pause, “when we stood in the middle of an empty hallway. It was after a rehearsal. Everyone else had gone home. I don’t remember what
we were arguing about. Maybe nothing. Maybe everything. But I remember what she said.”
Her fingers clench lightly in her lap.
“She said, ‘You don’t get to want me when it’s convenient, Seola. You either stand in the fire with me, or you walk away and never look back.’”
She laughs, breathless.
“And I walked away.”
The words hang there. She lets them.
“Did you regret it?” the interviewer asks gently.
“Yes,” Seola says, without hesitation. “But not for the reason you think.”
She looks up. Her eyes—deep, dark, and gleaming—hold the weight of a love story unwritten.
“I didn’t regret leaving,” she admits. “I regretted not turning back.”
A long silence.
The interviewer looks at her with something like sympathy. But Seola isn’t asking for it.
“I’ve lived half my life on stages,” she says. “Every night was a performance. Every smile is a rehearsal. But there was never a script for her. She made me forget the lines.”
Her voice shakes slightly now.
“And maybe… maybe that’s why I loved her.”
Another pause. The camera still rolls, red light steady.
“She wasn’t the kind of girl who asked to be loved. She didn’t trust easily. Didn’t let anyone in. I think she was scared that if someone really saw her, they’d run.”
Her voice drops.
“I didn’t run. But I hesitated. And sometimes, that’s worse.”
The interviewer starts to speak, but Seola holds up a hand, gently.
“There’s one thing I’ve never said before,” she says. “Not on stage. Not in interviews. Not even to her.”
A deep breath.
“I wanted forever with her. But I couldn’t offer her forever when I was still trying to belong to everyone else.”
A beat.
“So I chose the stage. And I lost the only person who made silence feel like a song.”
Silence fills the room like fog. The camera still rolls, capturing something raw, unpolished. A moment Seola spent years avoiding it.
“I didn’t think it would end like this,” she says. “With me sitting in front of a camera, talking about someone I still dream about.”
The interviewer speaks quietly. “If she’s watching this… what would you say?”
Seola hesitates.
“I’d say I’m sorry for choosing the spotlight when you were standing in the dark.”
Her voice wavers.
“I’d say I still remember how your hand felt when you grabbed mine, backstage, before our first duet. You thought no one saw.”
A long pause.
“And I did love you. I just didn’t know how to love you right.”
She stands up slowly, brushing the creases out of her outfit. The camera keeps rolling, but Seola doesn’t look back at it.
“I guess that’s what’s left when the stage falls silent,” she says, almost to herself. “The echo of everything we never said.”
And then she walks away.
Lights dim.
The screen fades to black.
Only her words remain.