The sound of light rain tapping against the window filled the silence of my room. Soft lights danced across the ceiling, bouncing off the LED mirror I had installed myself. It was one of those days when the outside world felt too far away — and all that existed was me, a brush, and my phone camera, ready to capture yet another attempt to show the world who I am.
My name is Kyrah Aylin. Brazilian, twenty-four years old, and with a peculiar belief that makeup can be more than aesthetics — it can be art, a refuge... even a language. I taught myself everything. YouTube tutorials, sleepless nights, and a kind of stubbornness that never let me quit. I’m not professionally trained, nor am I famous. But in the little corner of the internet where my videos live, I find something that keeps me going.
Today, like so many other days, I set up my ring light, positioned the mirror, and hit record. I chose cool tones — light, but intense strokes. Each brushstroke across my skin seemed to soothe something inside me. And then, I recorded.
The makeup was inspired by a concept that came to me while listening to a Korean group. Something about masks and freedom. I like turning feelings into color — it’s the way I connect with myself.
Once I finished editing, the video was ready. My heart was pounding as my finger hovered over the publish button.
“Will it work this time?” I whispered.
I took a deep breath. Clicked.
The notification appeared seconds later. The video was live.
Outside, the world moved on like nothing had changed. But inside… something felt different. Like I had released more than just content. Like, this time, I had sent out a quiet plea to be seen — truly seen.
Little did I know that, thousands of kilometers away, in a quiet, glass-walled building in Seoul, someone was watching that very same video.
Song Jiwon, ARX’s producer, was leaning back on the couch in the creative room, headphones on, reviewing fragments of an unfinished instrumental. His tired mind was searching for something — maybe inspiration, maybe a reason.
That’s when a phone screen, held out by Kang Jiheon, appeared in his field of view.
“Hyung… look at this,” Jiheon murmured, his eyes gleaming, like someone who had just discovered a hidden gem.
Jiwon took off his headphones, curious. Just a few seconds watching the young woman on screen — brush in hand, emotions turning into tones — and something inside him began to settle. He said nothing at first. Just watched.
“She’s good, right?” Jiheon said, still fixated on the video.
Jiwon gave a slight nod, eyes locked on the screen. As if that simple video, out of countless others, had cracked something open inside him.
No one in that room knew it yet, but that single click — that fleeting moment between light and shadow — was about to link two worlds that were never meant to cross.
And it all began with a tap on the publish button.

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