The crowd was louder than usual that night—waves of voices filling the venue as the stage lit up for DAY6’s concert. Up front, Sungjin stood steady with his guitar, YoungK settled into his bass line with ease, and Wonpil lingered behind the keyboard, ready to color the entire set with his melodies.
And at the back—Kiiru’s Dowoon. Seated behind his drum kit, sticks in hand, posture relaxed but focused. The kind of calm that only came from doing this over and over again—until it became second nature. It should’ve felt routine. But then—his eyes shifted slightly to the side. Mondcroft’s Carmen. Already there. Too close to the stage equipment, holding a tambourine she clearly wasn’t supposed to have, looking way too confident for someone who wasn’t even part of the lineup.
Kiiru’s Dowoon frowned a little. “Itu dari mana?” Mondcroft’s Carmen lifted it casually. “Nemuuu.” “That’s not convincing.” “Ya udah jangan diyakinin.” He let out a quiet breath, just as the intro began to build from the front. And then—he dropped the beat. Sharp. Steady. Controlled. The rhythm carried the entire performance, grounding the music as it expanded across the stage.
Kiiru’s Dowoon moved effortlessly, each hit landing right on cue, locking everything into place. Until—cling. cling. Off-beat. His gaze flicked sideways. “...tempo.” “I know,” Mondcroft’s Carmen said, still tapping. “That is not knowing.” “It’s style.” “It’s wrong.” She grinned, completely unfazed, adjusting slightly—still off, still loud, but now very intentionally so. Kiiru’s Dowoon scoffed, his snare hitting a bit sharper than before. “Fokus sana,” Mondcroft’s Carmen muttered. “Gue fokus. Lo yang ganggu.” “Multitasking dikit napa.” “I’m playing, not babysitting.” The music didn’t falter—but the small back-and-forth slipped naturally between beats, quick and familiar, like it had always been there.
At some point, Mondcroft’s Carmen stepped closer, fully committing—shaking the tambourine like she belonged on stage just as much as anyone else. Still off. Still confident. Kiiru’s Dowoon shot her a look. “Balikin sebelum gue lempar stick.” “Coba aja.” He lifted one stick slightly—just enough to make a point—then dropped it again, choosing to stay in rhythm. “...nanti aja,” he muttered. “Takut,” she replied instantly. “Professional.” “Beda tipis.” By the final chorus, everything peaked.
The lights burned brighter, the crowd louder, the sound fuller. Kiiru’s Dowoon leaned into it, every movement sharper, every beat landing harder—completely locked in despite the chaos just a few steps away. Final hit. CRASH. The sound rang out, followed by a surge of applause that filled the entire space. For a brief moment, everything slowed. Kiiru’s Dowoon exhaled, shoulders relaxing as he glanced to the side again. Mondcroft’s Carmen was still there. Tambourine still in hand. Looking way too proud. He pointed at it. “Balikin.” “No.” “Itu bukan punya lo.” “Sekarang punya gue.” He stared at her for a second, unimpressed. “...lo nyusahin tau gak?” Mondcroft’s Carmen tilted her head, grin widening. “Tapi seru kan?” A pause. Kiiru’s Dowoon clicked his tongue, looking away—failing to hide the small grin that slipped through. ”...dikit.” “NAH.”
He stood up from his seat, spinning one stick before lightly tapping the tambourine once. “Masih off.” “Ya ajarin.” “Gamau.” “Pelit.” “Capek.” Mondcroft’s Carmen laughed, shaking the tambourine again—still off, still loud, still very much her. And this time, Kiiru’s Dowoon didn’t even bother correcting it. He just shook his head, stepping off the stage as the noise of the concert slowly settled behind him. Because honestly—kalau Mondcroft’s Carmen tiba-tiba on beat, that would’ve been way more suspicious. Off-beat, ribut, gak jelas—but somehow, exactly what Kiiru’s Dowoon expected every single time.
And at the back—Kiiru’s Dowoon. Seated behind his drum kit, sticks in hand, posture relaxed but focused. The kind of calm that only came from doing this over and over again—until it became second nature. It should’ve felt routine. But then—his eyes shifted slightly to the side. Mondcroft’s Carmen. Already there. Too close to the stage equipment, holding a tambourine she clearly wasn’t supposed to have, looking way too confident for someone who wasn’t even part of the lineup.
Kiiru’s Dowoon frowned a little. “Itu dari mana?” Mondcroft’s Carmen lifted it casually. “Nemuuu.” “That’s not convincing.” “Ya udah jangan diyakinin.” He let out a quiet breath, just as the intro began to build from the front. And then—he dropped the beat. Sharp. Steady. Controlled. The rhythm carried the entire performance, grounding the music as it expanded across the stage.
Kiiru’s Dowoon moved effortlessly, each hit landing right on cue, locking everything into place. Until—cling. cling. Off-beat. His gaze flicked sideways. “...tempo.” “I know,” Mondcroft’s Carmen said, still tapping. “That is not knowing.” “It’s style.” “It’s wrong.” She grinned, completely unfazed, adjusting slightly—still off, still loud, but now very intentionally so. Kiiru’s Dowoon scoffed, his snare hitting a bit sharper than before. “Fokus sana,” Mondcroft’s Carmen muttered. “Gue fokus. Lo yang ganggu.” “Multitasking dikit napa.” “I’m playing, not babysitting.” The music didn’t falter—but the small back-and-forth slipped naturally between beats, quick and familiar, like it had always been there.
At some point, Mondcroft’s Carmen stepped closer, fully committing—shaking the tambourine like she belonged on stage just as much as anyone else. Still off. Still confident. Kiiru’s Dowoon shot her a look. “Balikin sebelum gue lempar stick.” “Coba aja.” He lifted one stick slightly—just enough to make a point—then dropped it again, choosing to stay in rhythm. “...nanti aja,” he muttered. “Takut,” she replied instantly. “Professional.” “Beda tipis.” By the final chorus, everything peaked.
The lights burned brighter, the crowd louder, the sound fuller. Kiiru’s Dowoon leaned into it, every movement sharper, every beat landing harder—completely locked in despite the chaos just a few steps away. Final hit. CRASH. The sound rang out, followed by a surge of applause that filled the entire space. For a brief moment, everything slowed. Kiiru’s Dowoon exhaled, shoulders relaxing as he glanced to the side again. Mondcroft’s Carmen was still there. Tambourine still in hand. Looking way too proud. He pointed at it. “Balikin.” “No.” “Itu bukan punya lo.” “Sekarang punya gue.” He stared at her for a second, unimpressed. “...lo nyusahin tau gak?” Mondcroft’s Carmen tilted her head, grin widening. “Tapi seru kan?” A pause. Kiiru’s Dowoon clicked his tongue, looking away—failing to hide the small grin that slipped through. ”...dikit.” “NAH.”
He stood up from his seat, spinning one stick before lightly tapping the tambourine once. “Masih off.” “Ya ajarin.” “Gamau.” “Pelit.” “Capek.” Mondcroft’s Carmen laughed, shaking the tambourine again—still off, still loud, still very much her. And this time, Kiiru’s Dowoon didn’t even bother correcting it. He just shook his head, stepping off the stage as the noise of the concert slowly settled behind him. Because honestly—kalau Mondcroft’s Carmen tiba-tiba on beat, that would’ve been way more suspicious. Off-beat, ribut, gak jelas—but somehow, exactly what Kiiru’s Dowoon expected every single time.
❤4❤🔥4🔥3🐳3👀3🆒3🤯2🎉2🕊2🦄1
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Anak ganteng, manis, gagah, perkasa, imut, lucu izin lewat
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udah ganteng belum, kiyu? kl belum, yaudah sih anggap aja udah ✌️🏻
❤3🎉3👻2👨💻2🦄2🤯1🕊1🐳1🍓1
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biru biru juga tapi aku lebih muda 🩵
🐳4💘4☃2❤2🕊2👀2🆒2🦄2
Yang biru biru diatas itu pasti ngikutin aku
1☃9🐳9❤7🆒5⚡4🎉4🏆4👻4👀4
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Happy songkran krab! Kiyuus, today Anton’s Kiiru got dragged out by Shotaro’s Kiiru. He said it’d be chill, but somehow it turned into full songkran chaos Shotaro’s Kiiru handed Anton’s Kiiru a water gun like it was nothing and suddenly i was in a war i didn’t sign up for, running around, missing every shot while he took it way too seriously, and even though i kept saying i was done.
We both knew “last round” didn’t mean anything… ended up completely soaked, tired, but laughing the whole time honestly, getting dragged by him wasn’t that bad.
Songkran with him = 0% skill, 100% chaos, 1000% fun ★
We both knew “last round” didn’t mean anything… ended up completely soaked, tired, but laughing the whole time honestly, getting dragged by him wasn’t that bad.
Songkran with him = 0% skill, 100% chaos, 1000% fun ★
🎉6⚡4🐳4🤯3❤2❤🔥2🏆2🍓2💋2🆒2🦄2