Mingyu_95
William Jakrapatr, twenty and fresh off a self-declared "rest year" in Hat Yai, arrives in Bangkok with a guitar slung over his shoulder, a black Jeep Wrangler parked downstairs, and big dreams of making it in music. He shares a sleek two-bedroom condo with his new step-brother Chokun, a loud, orange-loving chaos magnet who followed him to the city just to "stay close" and is now preparing to start college.
Two floors below, Est Supha, twenty-four, decorated national swimmer with three gold medals glinting in his trophy case, lives a disciplined life of early-morning laps and guarded emotions. He shares his condo with Ashton, his sharp-tongued, One Piece-obsessed best friend from high school, who is also about to begin university.
The first spark happens at the building's private gym pool: William, dripping sweat after a late-night workout, locks eyes with Est mid-stroke. It's nothing dramatic-just a polite nod that keeps repeating every few days until coffee turns into late-night drives in the Jeep, and "just friends" starts feeling like a very thin lie. Est, who has never believed in love at first sight and keeps his heart behind walls higher than any starting block, finds those walls cracking, one shy smile from William at a time.
Meanwhile, on the first day of college orientation, Chokun literally crashes into Ashton, spilling iced coffee down both their shirts. The collision ignites instant mutual loathing-snapping, bickering in hallways, petty arguments in the elevator, and dramatic eye-rolls across the gym. Everyone can see the tension is flammable; only Ashton refuses to admit that hate has started tasting suspiciously like something else.
Between early training sessions and late-night songwriting, rivalries and quiet confessions, they're about to discover that sometimes the people who drive you craziest are the same ones who make the city finally feel like home.