Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 164: Back at the Island (pt.2) from My Life as a CEO of an Entertainment Company, a Comedy novel by FocacciaBread.

And so, the one hour training montage began.

Mikko, to his considerable credit, had a teaching thod. It was not conventional. It was not anything that would be found in any dance pedagogy textbook currently in existence. It was, by most asurable standards, completely unhinged.

But it worked.

"Okay — five, six, seven and — bunny hop to the left, scratch scratch. Final destination, zoom, getting shot getting shot. Tipsy tipsy, high high, wave your hand in the club. Egyptian — up, down, left, right. Dolphin dive, roll to a kneel, and then — aura farm."

Now.

For those of you sitting there with your heads tilted at a concerning angle, wondering what any of that has to do with choreography — allow , as your faithful overcaffeinated narrator, to offer so translation.

Final destination, for instance. In Mikko's very specific, very committed ntal landscape, this works as follows: arms raised parallel, like the wings of a plane. Standard. Fine. But then — Final Destination — because the wings tilt. Diagonal. At that specific angle that makes you think of a plane that has made so questionable aerodynamic decisions. And then zoom is the spin that follows, arms still tilted, still fully committing to the aviation taphor, rotating with the calm certainty of a man who has complete faith in his own internal logic.

Does it make sense in a traditional sense?

Absolutely not.

Did it sohow make complete and total sense to Zen?

Reader — it did.

Because here was the thing about Zen that Liam's frustration had never bothered to investigate, that the evaluations hadn't captured, that the standard teaching thods had been bumping up against for weeks without understanding why —

Zen's problem was never the steps themselves. It was the sequence. The order. The way choreography is taught in clean nurical counts — five, six, seven, eight — or worse, when the counting disappears entirely and it becos pure rhythm, boom ka ka da da da, feel the music, let it move you, which is a beautiful philosophy and absolutely useless to a brain that needs sothing concrete to hold onto between point A and point B.

Numbers floated. Beats dissolved. But images?

Images stayed.

Bunny hop. Scratch scratch. Final destination. Getting shot getting shot. Wave your hand in the club.

Each step suddenly had a face. A shape. A story attached to it that his brain could grab onto and line up in order, one after another, a whole visual narrative running alongside the music like a second track only he could hear.

The choreography that had been slipping through his fingers for days —

Started to stick.

Step by step. Eight count by eight count. Mikko calling out his ridiculous, perfect, completely made-up nas with the absolute confidence of soone who had never once doubted his own system, and Zen moving through each one with growing certainty, the sequence assembling itself in his mind like sothing finally clicking into place.

Dolphin dive.

Roll to a kneel.

Aura farm.

By the end of the hour —

Zen knew the choreography.

"Dude." Mikko was staring at Zen like he had just watched him sprout a second head in real ti. "What the hell? That was perfect." A pause, genuinely baffled. "What happened? Why couldn't you do that from the beginning?"

"I honestly don't know," Zen's phone said. "The way you taught it just made everything so much easier to rember."

Mikko considered this information with the gravity it apparently deserved. A long, thoughtful silence. The face of a man doing serious internal calculations.

"Huh." Another pause. "Am I a genius? Or am I just amazing like that?"

"Alright, Mr. Amazing," Zen's phone said flatly, "don't float too high."

And Zen — this boy who had been crying twenty minutes ago, who had stood in the rubble of soone else's anger and decided to build sothing out of it anyway — had a smile on his face. Not a big one. Small and soft and carrying just the faintest edge of sothing sharper. The precise, specific combination of baby girl coded softness and zero-warning shade delivery. Innocence and mischief, perfectly balanced, occupying the sa expression at the sa ti.

It shouldn't have worked as well as it did.

"Pff—" Mikko laughed despite himself. "Smart ass." He shook his head, still smiling. "Anyway — keep going like that and Liam is going to be eating his own foot the next ti he sees you."

"It's not perfect yet though," Zen's phone said imdiately. He was already shifting back into position, already pulling the music up. "One more ti. I want it perfect. For Liam."

"Dude." Mikko's body made a unilateral decision and deposited itself directly onto the studio floor — knees up, back against the mirror, done. "Chill. We have been going nonstop. Trust , it's good. It is genuinely, actually good."

Zen blinked. Looked around the room as if seeing it for the first ti.

"Has it been an hour already?"

"A full one. Sit down before I drag you down."

Zen sat. Cross-legged, across from Mikko, the studio floor cool beneath them, the music finally quiet. Both of them just existing for a mont in the particular comfortable silence of people who have just worked hard together and earned the rest.

Mikko broke it first.

"Hey — don't take what Liam said too much to heart, by the way." His voice was casual, but the intention behind it wasn't. "From what I've heard, the guy just got diagnosed with IED when he entered LEAVEN."

"IED?"

"Intermittent Explosive Disorder," Mikko said. "Fancy clinical way of saying his anger gets away from him before he can catch it."

"Ohhhh."

The robotic voice of the app delivered this with what sounded, in its flat synthetic tone, like the world's most deadpan sarcasm. A long, slow, deeply unimpressed Ohhhh that implied several things it technically had no business implying.

Mikko lost it.

"DUDE—" He pointed at the phone with the energy of a man who had been personally wronged. "That robotic voice is genuinely starting to irritate , I hope you know that—"

He was laughing though. Fully, helplessly laughing, the kind that takes over before you can decide whether or not you want to do it.

(And listen — I say this with full love and zero malice: Mikko, if you sohow develop the ability to read author's notes and take offense at being called colorful and weird — I made you. I think you're wonderful. Please don't co for . Thank you. Carry on.)

Anyway. Back to the story. Ehe. 😜

"From what I heard though," Mikko continued, leaning back on his hands, "Liam's been getting better and better the longer he's been in LEAVEN. Like, genuinely improving."

Zen was quiet for a mont. Then, with a small considerate glance at Mikko — mindful, in the way Zen was mindful about everything — he typed out his response and simply passed the phone over instead of letting the app speak it.

A small, quiet courtesy. For Mikko's gradually deteriorating relationship with the robotic voice.

Mikko read it:

"If he's getting better, then I think my falling behind genuinely made him feel like his dream was being threatened. I kind of understand where he's coming from."

Mikko looked up from the phone. Looked at Zen. Handed it back.

"Okay, in my humble opinion?" he said. "I get where he's coming from. I do. But that doesn't make the outburst completely okay either. He said so pretty an things to you."

Zen took the phone back. Typed. Passed it over again.

Mikko read:

"I don't have any hard feelings toward him. In the wise words of the person who apparently created — let it go, hoe. Let it go."

Mikko's face did the full journey — warm smile arriving, sitting comfortably for approximately one and a half seconds —

And then stopping.

He lifted his head slowly.

"Wait." He held the phone up slightly. "Wait, wait, wait. Hold on." His eyes narrowed. "I don't rember 'hoe' being part of the acclaid children's animated classic."

Zen blinked. Looked at Mikko. Then looked back at what he had typed.

Read it.

And the smile that appeared was not the soft, small, carefully contained one. It was big. Bright. Caught completely off guard by itself, the kind of smile that arrives before you can decide whether to let it.

He took the phone back. Typed quickly. Passed it over.

"It ca from a parody I ca across. I don't know why but I found it really funny, so I guess it just... stuck."

Mikko stared at this ssage for a long mont.

Then he looked up at Zen with the expression of a man standing at the edge of a door he was not entirely sure he wanted to open.

"...What kind of things have you been watching," he said slowly.

Less a question. More a man coming to terms with sothing.

"Actually," he added, after a beat, raising one hand slightly, "you know what — I'm not sure I want to know the answer to that."

You are reading My Life as a CEO of an Entertainment Company Chapter 164: Back at the Island (pt.2) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Fluff cover
Same genre

Fluff

RavensDagger ·Comedy

Everyyear,onthesameday,peopleacrosstheworldawakennewpowers.TheytakethefirststeponthepathtobecomingSuperHeroes...orVillains.EmilyWrightwantsnothingt...

My Silly, Sweet Wife cover
Same genre

My Silly, Sweet Wife

Bu Fei ·Comedy

HeisthegreatmasteroftheHeavenlyGodTemple,underwhomtherearethirty-sixHeavenlyStarsandseventy-twoEarthlyFiends,overseeingnearlyhalfoftheworld'swealth...

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.