The Anti-Fan and the Idol – My Summer in Seoul Read Online Rachel Van Dyken

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Dark, New Adult, Novella, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 36
Estimated words: 36143 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 181(@200wpm)___ 145(@250wpm)___ 120(@300wpm)
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And I won’t ever be anything but someone who lacks star potential.

“Stop.” He grabs me by the shoulders. “See, that’s your problem.”

“W-what?” I jerk away.

He grabs me again. “You think too much. You need to feel.”

“Or maybe I feel too much and think too little,” I counter.

His smirk is devastating as he jerks me close to him. “Maybe you should just focus on the feeling.”

His chest is inches from mine.

My breath hitches as his full mouth lowers, his lips nearly caressing my ear as he whispers, “Feel me.”

“What?” I don’t mean to shriek; it just happens.

His chuckle is dark and delicious, like a single bite of chocolate cake you don’t even want to swallow because it tastes like heaven on your tongue.

“Feel.” He spins me around until I face the mirror. His hands glide from my shoulders down my body. “Just feel before we start with all the counting, the steps, the movement. Because the song is about feeling, emotion…” His voice lowers. “Sex.”

I gasp, a bit horrified because while I know it sometimes happens between trainees, it is literally never spoken about aloud. “Is that even allowed?”

He smirks in the mirror. “It’s not like we spell it out, but the hints are there. So, you need to feel. You need to empower the people watching you to feel. And you need to make them believe it, even if you want to strangle me. We’re doing something different.”

I gulp, then nod my head. My entire body is a live wire as I stand there, staring at myself in the mirror. Finally, I close my eyes. The song starts again. Without realizing it, I’m swaying. Moving.

Ryan stays behind me.

I can feel his body heat and hear his breaths. I could probably count his heartbeats if I were closer.

The song finds its ending.

My eyes flash open.

He stares at me through the mirror. “Ready?”

“Ready,” I say.

Five hours later, with one break for coffee and a protein bar, my body hurts so bad I want to live in a hot tub. I’m starving and want real food but really haven’t had anything outside of ramyeon and vegetables for years, so why change now?

I swear my body’s crying for more.

But I’m still bigger than anyone else.

Taller.

I’m still not right.

My stomach growls when I go to get my stuff.

Ryan, of course, just happens to be right next to me, grabbing his bag.

He picks it up and says nothing.

Embarrassed, I grab mine and follow him out.

“You did okay for your first day,” he says without looking back. “Tomorrow, you’ll work on your part of the song and do another round of choreography.”

I run to catch up with him. “How long do we have to get this all down?”

He stops, and I nearly run into him.

His head hangs. “We have four weeks until our Showcase.”

“What!?” I shriek. “That’s impossible! Like literally impossible!”

“We don’t have a choice. The label gave us that long. It took us a while to find people willing, and”—he shakes his head—“you wouldn’t understand.”

“Understand what?” I ask. “Why not give us more time?”

“Because they want us to fucking fail!” Ryan shouts, finally turning around. “Don’t you see? We’re doing something different. We’re trying to break out of an industry that wants you to stay the same over and over again. Perfect skin, perfect bodies, perfect clothes, perfect smiles for your fans. I want to do something different, and so does Haneul. And if this label’s willing to give us that chance, we need to take it. Who knows when or if we’ll get it again?”

I’m stunned and left speechless for a minute. “Wait, so they’re really letting you take the full reins on this? From clothing to diets to—?”

“It’s just Haneul and me—and now you and Jisoo.”

It’s just us.

I swallow the dryness building up in my throat. “And if we fail?”

Ryan’s gaze is sharp. “We can’t.”

“But if we do?”

“Are you not hearing me?” He slams his hands against the wall next to him. “We. Can’t. Fail. If we do, you’ll be working at Subway. Nothing against sandwiches, but we can’t fail. Do you understand what I’m saying?”

I squeeze my eyes shut. He’s so mean. And yet, at the same time, I appreciate the honesty.

No honeyed words.

Not even any promises.

This industry will beat you down until you don’t even recognize yourself anymore. He knows it.

He has a story, too.

I’m afraid to ask.

Because it might make me run.

“Okay.” I nod. “I get it. Don’t become a sandwich artist before twenty over a failed group.”

He puts his hand on my head and shoves me away a bit playfully.

Some might see his attitude as cruel, but I know it’s more like, yeah, we’re all in this together.

And now I’m singing High School Musical in my head.

Perfect.

“Good.” He turns and keeps walking. “Six a.m. Make sure your vocals are warm.”

“Am I singing a solo or—?”


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