Gjesti_x_albos_prap_tthirri [TRUSTED]

Gjesti leaned against the doorframe, a smirk tugging at his lips, though his eyes remained serious. "They always know when you're about to find the right note. That’s the trap. You think you’re writing about the past, but the past is still calling you in the present."

The city was quiet, the kind of silence that only comes at 3:00 AM when the neon lights of the boulevard start to feel like ghosts. sat in the studio, the blue light of the monitors reflecting in his eyes. He was chasing a melody that felt like a memory—something sharp, bittersweet, and impossible to pin down. gjesti_x_albos_prap_tthirri

"Every time I think the song is finished, the phone rings," Albos muttered, finally turning the screen off. "It’s like she knows." Gjesti leaned against the doorframe, a smirk tugging

His phone buzzed on the mahogany desk. No name, just a number he had tried to delete a dozen times but knew by heart. He didn't pick up. He didn't have to. He knew the rhythm of that vibration. "Prap t’thirri?" (He called you again?) You think you’re writing about the past, but

He walked over to the mic and signaled for Albos to pull up the beat. The track started with a lonely, filtered guitar—cold and echoing.

The voice came from the shadows of the booth. stepped out, adjusting his headphones. He had been watching Albos stare at the screen for the last hour. There was no judgment in his tone, only the weary understanding of someone who had lived through the same lyrics they were trying to write.

As the bass dropped, Gjesti began to pour the frustration of every unanswered text and every midnight "I miss you" into the verse. Albos found the melody he had been looking for—a haunting synth line that sounded exactly like a phone ringing in an empty room.