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Trapped in a Novel as the D-Class Alpha I Hated Most-Chapter 59: My First Real— Kiss ♡
The city at night is a different creature—cold, dark, but strung with necklaces of warm streetlight. Deniz and I walk beneath them, our steps slow, synchronized. His eyes are fixed on the pavement again, and the silence between us has grown dense, filled with the echo of his father’s laughter and the unspoken fear hiding behind it.
I can’t bear it.
I break the quiet, my voice soft. "Your dad... he’s incredible. Even lying in a hospital bed, he talks and smiles like nothing’s wrong."
Deniz looks up, his expression shadowed. "I’m sorry. For my dad. He always talks like that, he doesn’t mean to be—"
I cut him off gently but firmly. "Deniz, why are you apologizing? I loved meeting him. He was wonderful."
He looks back down, the sadness clinging to him like a second skin. It doesn’t make sense.
Mr. David seemed... okay. Tired, but present. So why does Deniz look like he’s carrying the weight of the world?
Why..?
I stop walking. The sudden halt of my footsteps on the quiet sidewalk is loud.
Deniz takes a few more steps before he realizes I’m not beside him. He stops, turns, his face a mask of confusion in the yellow lamplight.
"What’s wrong?"
I don’t answer. I just stare at him, seeing past the professional composure, past the polite apologies, to the raw, trembling fear he’s been carrying alone.
Aren’t I the one who should be asking that question?
He looks away, unable to hold my gaze.
I close the distance between us in two strides. We’re close now. Close enough for me to feel the warmth radiating from him, to see the rapid flutter of his pulse in his throat.
I reach out and take his hand. His skin is cool, his fingers trembling slightly.
He looks up at me, his cheeks flushing, his eyes wide with a nervous, vulnerable surprise.
"Zyren...?"
"Deniz," I say, my voice low and steady, holding his hand firmly.
"Shouldn’t I be the one asking that question? Is everything okay?"
He stares at me, his lips parting slightly. For a long moment, there is only the sound of distant traffic and our shared breath frosting in the cold air. Our eyes are locked, and in his, I see the dam beginning to crack.
Then I see it. The glimmer. A single, perfect tear spills over his lower lash and traces a path down the curve of his flushed cheek. Then another.
He doesn’t make a sound. He just stands there, crying silently in the middle of the sidewalk, holding my hand like it’s the only solid thing in a collapsing world.
I stay silent too. Words are useless here. Hollow.
Finally, his voice comes, so soft it’s almost lost to the night, a broken whisper.
"I’m not okay."
His free hand fists at his side, knuckles white.
He doesn’t have to say more. Before the next sob can wrench its way out, I pull him into me. My arms wrap around him, tight and sure. For a second, he’s stiff, surprised.
Then, with a shuddering gasp, he melts. His arms come around my waist, clutching at the fabric of my coat with a desperate, childlike strength. He buries his face against my shoulder, and the silent tears become ragged, heartbroken sobs that shake his entire frame.
My shoulder grows damp with his warmth.
His voice is a raw, trembling vibration against my skin. "The doctor said... there’s no guarantee. The surgery... his heart is too weak. They don’t know if he’ll... if he’ll wake up."
I don’t shush him. I don’t tell him it will be alright. I just hold him. One hand moves in slow, steady circles on his back. The other comes up to cradle the back of his head, my fingers threading gently through his soft hair.
He cries, and I let him. He cries for the fear, for the uncertainty, for the brave face he had to wear in that hospital room.
He cries for his father, and for himself.
The strong, capable, endlessly competent Deniz finally lets the pain he’s been hiding from everyone—from his father, from the world, from me—pour out. He holds onto me like I’m the only solid thing in a crumbling world.
And I just hold him through it, a silent anchor in his private storm. Sometimes, silence isn’t empty.
It’s the only space big enough to hold a pain too vast for words.
He needed this. He needed to finally let the pain out. And he needed someone to be there when he did.
After a long while, the quiet sobs finally subside. Deniz pushes back gently, his eyes fixed on the ground, swollen and red. He swallows hard, the aftermath of his tears leaving him raw and vulnerable.
He cried so much my shoulder is damp, a testament to the flood he’d been holding back.
I reach up, my touch feather-light. My thumb brushes the wet tracks from his cheeks, skimming over the dark, damp fringe of his lashes.
His skin is warm, flushed. His dark, wet lashes tremble as he finally dares to look up at me.
"Deniz," I whisper, the words soft but sure in the hushed night. "Everything will be alright. You’re not alone. I’m here. I’m right here with you."
He stares at me, as if trying to memorize the shape of the promise. Finally, his voice is a hoarse murmur.
"Thank you. Thank you for... everything."
My hands are still holding his face, anchoring him. "You don’t need to thank me," I whisper. "Just... don’t hide from me again. Don’t carry this alone."
His lashes are still clumped with moisture. I brush my thumb over the corner of his eye, catching a last, stray tear. The intimacy of the gesture sends a current through the cold night air.
"Deniz," I breathe, the words spilling out with a vulnerability that terrifies me. "I want to be your one and only. The one you can’t hide from. The one you share your happiness with, your problems... everything. Please. Don’t hide anything from me."
He looks at me, his beautiful, tired eyes wide, his breath hitching. He’s silent, but his gaze holds mine, filled with a thousand unspoken things.
My gaze drops, almost of its own will, to his lips. They’re slightly parted, still damp.
I don’t know if this is right. I don’t know if it’s wrong. All I know is that I want to do it.
I need to seal this promise, to cross the line we’ve been dancing around since the moment I opened my eyes in this world.
Before he can speak, before doubt can creep in, I lean closer. Slowly. Giving him every chance to pull away.
He doesn’t.
My lips touch his. It’s the softest press, a question more than a statement.
I don’t know how to do this—it’s my first real kiss— my experience is purely theoretical, gleaned from a thousand novels in another life. But instinct takes over.
He doesn’t push me back. He doesn’t say a word.
He just... accepts it.
Encouraged, I close my eyes. I kiss him again, this time with more certainty, adjusting the angle, learning the feel of him.
His lips are impossibly soft, and warm despite the night chill. Then, driven by a need I can no longer contain, I deepen the kiss.
It’s not practiced or skilled, but it’s heartfelt, pouring every ounce of my worry, my protectiveness, my burgeoning, overwhelming feeling for him into the connection.
His lips yield, then tentatively move against mine. A faint, shuddering breath escapes him, warming my skin.
In that moment, with the taste of salt from his tears and the scent of night air and him filling my senses, I have only one, desperate wish.
I wish this moment would never end.







