Chapter 7 | Beneath the Tangerine Trees (Author-Narrated) - podcast episode cover

Chapter 7 | Beneath the Tangerine Trees (Author-Narrated)

Sep 18, 202520 minSeason 1Ep. 7
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Episode description

Five days left.
One orchard unfinished.
One farewell too soon.

The orchard gave them sixty mornings,
but even the longest harvest must end.
From quiet breaths in the half-light,
to a list left open,
to a kiss pressed deep beneath the trees,
their time narrows into hours.

And then, the airport.
A hug that holds longer than it should.
A salute awkward, but certain.
A road driven alone.
And in Seoul, a boy who begins again,
building a shop named after what he lost.

In uniform, Eugene carries the orchard in his chest,
his runs steadier for the jogs Han once made him keep.
A promise lingers on his lips.
Fifteen months to wait.
A lifetime to remember.

Beneath the Tangerine Trees is a story that unfolds in the spaces between.
A gentle, emotional drift told through a quiet BL series,
where touch and glance speak louder than promises.
It’s LGBT love in its most tender form.
A love story carried on breaths and pauses.
It’s what happens when hearts try to speak without breaking.

🍊 Sometimes, it’s not how it ends.
It’s what refuses to fade.



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Original Music: “Beneath the Tangerine Trees” now streaming:

https://open.spotify.com/album/2slFZtV8l7vZ6mQ26uF5vR


Also from this story: “Tangerine Orchard” now streaming:

https://open.spotify.com/album/4lgmXgqV4Vka8WbsmSDEaR


More from this story: “Tangerine Pop” now streaming:

https://open.spotify.com/album/7xvl45K0MGIsX2eYz8kp3U


For official music from our Podcast Stories:

https://open.spotify.com/artist/6CijVPUeJt3ld2WwOkPHiK



© 2025 Gay Audio Books. All rights reserved.

Transcript

The orchard gave them two months. 60 mornings to wake to the same light, 60 nights to lie close. But even the longest harvest has it sent, and now only five days remain. 5 days to finish their list, 5 days to hold on to what they built. Five days before goodbye becomes real. The orchard has watched them, from the first awkward touches to the first kiss, to every moment that became more than they expected.

This is where it all gathers. The last fruit, the last kiss beneath the trees, the last night before parting. This is beneath the tangerine trees. Chapter 7 It was more than a kiss. The morning had barely begun. The lights were still faint, too weak to climb the hills, the room holding onto the night's chill. Eugene was asleep, deeper than he had been in days, one hand curled loose against the pillow, his lips parted slightly, a slow, steady breath slipping out

with each rise of his chest. The blanket had pulled half down, unmoved, carefully around the room, every action measured against the stillness. He bent to pick up his shirt from the chair, lifting it without a scrape. The floor groaned once beneath him and he froze, eyes flicking back to Eugene. Nothing. The boy didn't stir. Hun slipped out into the washroom, water splashing sharp against his skin, cold enough to steal his breath. Most mornings he would have

laced his shoes after jump. The orchard rose until the sun rose, until his legs ached and the day felt lighter. But not this morning. Today, the run could wait. When Han stepped back inside, the room hadn't changed. Eugene hadn't changed. Blanket high, lashes start against his skin. Han sat at the edge of the floor, bed, towel tossed aside. He leaned back on his palms and let his gaze linger piece by piece.

The faint hollow in his cheek pressed him by sleep, the way his fingers twitched once, then stilled. The steady curve of his breath, unbothered, unaware, and tried to memorize it, as if staring long enough might carpet into memory. He thought of all the things he would miss. Not the sharp teasing, not even the kisses, but this, the quiet, the ordinary, the proof that someone could rest this close to him and trust the morning to

come. He thought back to the first night on the floor, bed, Eugene stiff beside him, the space between them wide as a wall. Now there was no space at all, only this steady breathing. Eugene stirred, lashes fluttering, his eyes finally opening, heavy with sleep. They found Han watching him. His voice was low, rough at the edges, but touched was quite amusement as he asked. You watching me sleep? Hun? Smirked, sharp and quick, but the weed in his chest stayed.

No. He said lightly, tone cutting like a knife. Just making sure you're still breathing. Eugene gave a small laugh, muffled as he turned on to his side and let the smirk fade. But his eyes didn't move away. For a moment, they only looked at each other, no words, no sound but the orchard outside. As if even the leaves were waiting. The orchard carried its rhythm, as it always had. Branches swayed, insects hummed in their hidden places, the scent of peal and earth hung warm in the air.

But their movements slowed. Not lazy, not distracted, just slower, as if neither of them wanted to work to end. A crate sat open at Hunt's feet, half filled. He leaned against it, rolling a tendrin in his hand, thumb pressing against the skin until the oils clung to him. When he grew restless, he tossed it into the air, caught it with a slap of palm. Up again, down again, the rhythm steady, almost careless. Across from him, Eugene stacked

fruit into neat rows. He worked slowly with scare, wiping dirt from each one, pausing longer than necessary, as if the ACT itself might buy them more time. When he straightened, his eyes shifted toward the counter at the edge of the house. The list was there, Folded, creased edges soften from weeks of being opened and closed. The ink had blurred where their fingers had smudged it, words written in uneven lines, some bold, some faint.

They had made it in laughter, scribbling down moments they thought might never happen, daring themselves to fill it. Now. Most of it was marked through eating fruit straight from the branch, baking until the kitchen filled with sugar and peel, staying up until dawn, whispering words they couldn't remember in the morning, and the word kiss written more than once, each marked bolder than the last, as though repetition could pin it to memory.

Hung caught the fruit again and tossed it higher this time, grinning at his own carelessness. Looks like we're nearly perfect students. He said, his tone sharp, a grin flickering across his mouth. Almost a whole list done. Eugene brushed his palm against his pants, then reach for the paper. He smoothed it open, eyes tracing down each cross outline until they stop at the bottom. Lonely rock, the words that bare, untouched, no mark through them, no memory attached.

He stared at it too long, the silence gathering around him. Then he folded the paper slowly, carefully, as though gentleness might soften what it meant. Let's leave this one out, he said finally, voice steady. I'm not lonely. Hung caught the tender in mid air and didn't throw it again. His lip twitched, the way they always did when he wanted to cut through heaviness with a joke, but nothing came. The orchard seemed to notice. A branch shifted through the air

was still. Even the crates felt too loud when the wood cracked under Eugene's touch. Eugene set to fold the page back on the crate, leaving his hand there a moment longer than needed. His fingers pressed flat, as if holding the words in place might change them. When he pulled away, the silence remained. Han leaned back against the crate, fruit still resting in his palm. He watched Eugene from the corner of his eye, but said

nothing. And Eugene was the page still warm in his hand, didn't speak either. It wasn't an empty silence. It wasn't heavy. It was full of what they had said already, and of everything they never would. The orchard had thinned, rose once, bowed with bright fruit, now stood lighter branches half bare. What clung to them were the strays. Sweet but not for market. Good for juice, for jam. Desserts, maybe, but desserts needed someone to eat then, and soon.

No one would be here for that. Hun sat down, 1/2 filled crate and rubbed the back of his neck, the work abandoned before it was finished. He glanced once at the Rose, then at Eugene, and let a crooked smile curve across his mouth. Don't worry. Hun said, voice easy, almost careless. I can't manage the rest. Eugene's lips parted as if to argue, but the words caught. The silence between them already

carried too much. They left the tools where they stood, crates half packed, fruits still clinging, the orchard unfinished. Their steps fell into rhythm as they drifted down the path. The grass whispered on their foot, the breeze talked at their sleeves. The scent of citrus hung heavy, sharp and sweet. Neither spoke, neither needed to. Both knew where the past LED. It brought them to the same place. Here, beneath the tangerine trees, fruit had scattered into the dirt like marbles.

Laughter had broken into surprise. A first kiss had come. Now there was no surprise. Hun stepped closer, slow, certain. No joke in his eyes. The space between them dissolved when his lips met Eugene's. The kiss was unhurried, but not soft. It carried weight, the warmth of mouses pressing closer. Breath caught between them, the ache of something ending even as it deepened.

Eugene's hand rose to Han's shoulder, then slid up to the back of his neck, holding him there, not pulling harder, not letting go. Their breath is tangled, the orchard pressing close around them. The air itself seemed to still. When they parted, their foreheads stayed close. Eugene's eyes opened slowly, his voice low, almost pleading. Once more, Hans's breast caught. A faint laugh escaped him, not sharp, not mocking, but warm and unsteady. And then he kissed him again,

this time longer, deeper. The orchard stood around them, still as memory already foaming. Branches weighed once, but no fruits fell. The silence wrapped tight, carrying everything they couldn't say. The orchard slipped behind them, branches bowed, and rows of green gave way to the open Rd. Hun drove, both hands steady on the wheel, though his chest was not. Beside him, Eugene's father sat silent, eyes fixed on the stretcher head, his breast deep but uneven in the back.

Eugene leaned into the window, his mother beside him, whispering small reminders about the bags, about timing. Her voice was gentle, but the words passed like air. The road wound them out of the fields. Greenhill softened into farmland, then into concrete. The air lost its sweetness, replaced was heat rising from the road. Eugene shifted once, shoulders brushing the glass. His reflection blinked back at

him from the window. He glanced forward at Han's profile, then dropped his gaze again. Hunt didn't look back, but his grip on the wheel tightened from the passenger seat. His father cleared his throat, a sound meant to steady the silence, but it faded as quickly as it came. The city gathered around them, building stacked higher. Signs pointed forward, departures, arrivals. Hun excelled. Once, long and low, as if trying not to let it sound, they parked. The car fell quiet, engine

ticking as it could. Then doors opened. The noise of the airports built in, wheels clattering, voice echoing, announcements calling out. They crossed the concrete, through the sliding glass doors into the white mouse of the terminal. The air smelled of coffee, steel and fuel. Every sound echo too big, too sharp, swallowing anything small. Han walked at Eugene's side. The checkpoint rolls ahead, belts and trays, lines of people, officers waving them through.

Here, only three could go forward. Han stopped. His hand tightened on the strap of the back, then fell away. Eugene's father moved first into the line. His mother touched Eugene's arm, murmured something only for him. Eugene turned back. Then he stepped forward and closed the distance. Han opened his arm without a word. Eugene pressed into him, the hug rougher, longer than either had meant it to be. Han's chin touched his hair. Eugene's hand fisted in his shirt.

Neither moved, neither let go. Finally, Eugene drew back. A half smile flickered at his lips, heavy but sure. Then almost shy. He lifted a hand in a salute. Crooked, awkward, not quite proper, but it carried weight all the same. I'll return as a man, he said. His voice wavered, but the words held. Hunt's chest tightened, the faintest smirk tugging at the corner of his mouse. Eugene lowered his hand, turned, and followed his parents toward the line.

He didn't say goodbye, he didn't need to. He turned. Hunt stood rooted, watching every step. At the screen door, Eugene looked back once. Hunt lifted a hand. Not a wave, just a steady hold in the air. Eugene answered was the same brief, certain, and then the door slit shut between them. Hun drove back alone. The passenger seat was empty now. The road out to the airport curved past Glaston Steel, past signs pointing to gates. Traffic closed in.

Horns sharpened the air. Block by block, the city loosened. Buildings sent into houses, houses sent into fields, fields been into hills. Green returned, the land rolling wider, the orchard waiting beyond it. But the drive felt longer this time. Every mile dragged, every turn pressed lower, as if the road itself didn't want to end. Han's hand stayed tight on the wheel. He kept his eyes forward, never to the side.

And he thought, in 10 more days he will be on this road again, not returning to the orchard, not to Eugene, but leaving Jeju behind, back to Seoul. The thought pressed in, heavier than the silence. The orchard would not wait for either of them. Months is later, Han was back in Seoul, the city pressed around him, glassed and steel stacked High Street, restless wires cutting the sky into lines. It was nothing like Jeju, nothing like the orchard.

He stood at the counter of a narrow post office, the smell of ink and dust around him. The envelope was already sealed, the address written clear. His handwriting looked sharper here, almost too neat. He dropped the letter into the slot, a soft scrape of paper against metal. Outside, the air was thick with rain. On concrete. Hung carried a folder under his arm. Rent papers, cost sheets, list

with numbers and names. He walked quickly, ice forward until he reached the narrow door he had claimed. The shop wasn't much, yet at the centre lay one page. Edges curl from being touched too often, a hand drawn sign with forewords beneath the tendering trees. Huntraced the letter with his thumb, not to smudge them, but to ground them, to make the idea feel real beneath his skin. He sat down, the city noise muffled into a low hum outside

the glass. Opening a notebook, he flipped through pages filled with receipts, supplier contacts, rent calculations. But at the top of the current page, written darker than anything else, one line anchored everything. Fruit from Eugene's orchard. He closed the notebook, set the pen aside, and leaned back in the chair. The shop was still empty, but it was enough to keep moving forward. Enough to wait. Three months had passed. Training camp was behind Eugene now.

He was posted a rhythm of Army life, press into every hour, drills, orders, shouts cutting through the air. He was still getting used to it, the weight of the uniform, the way the day stacked without pause. But when they ran, he was less breathless than the others. The Orchard Rose had trained him. The jog was hung, carving strengths into his legs, air into his chest. He had hated them once. Now he carried them like a secret advantage. On his bunk, Eugene unfolded our letter.

The handwriting was sharp, familiar. Han's voice seemed to rise from the page as he read, and for a moment the barracks wall fell farther away. A small smile tugged at him. He folded the letter closed. Then Eugene set the letter aside, leaned back, and closed his eyes. He thought to himself. So did I get to kiss him? The words caught in his chest. Well, it was more than a kiss, it was a promise. Just 15 more months and we'll start again together.

This was Beneath the Tangerine Trees, a story of orchard mornings, of lists written in laughter, of kisses that became promises, and of goodbyes that were never really the end. Han found his way back to Seoul, carrying the orchard into his hands, turning memory into something new. Eugene carried the orchard in his breath. 15 months is marked not by loneliness, but by the hope of what waited after. And though the orchard grew quiet, their story does not.

It lingers in every letter, in every fruit that ripens, in every promise not yet broken. Thank you for listening to this journey. The full compilation of Beneath the Tendrin Trees will be coming soon and after this. New stories, new faces, new places to fall into. Until then, don't forget to like, share and subscribe.

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