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one hour away

Summary:

What does it mean to end something kindly, only to discover it never truly ended?
What happens when time passes, distance is kept, and yet something remains?

Wonwoo broke up with Junhui believing he was doing the right thing. Four years later, they meet again at university and bow like strangers. But the past has a way of resurfacing, and some bonds refuse to stay in memory alone.

Notes:

This story explores grief, family pressure, and the lasting impact of a past relationship. It also includes themes of pregnancy and infant death. Please take care while reading.

Chapter 1: meeting again without meeting at all

Chapter Text

The taxi lets him out near the back gate of Yonsei, where the road narrows and the hill begins. The vinyl seat had stuck faintly to the back of his neck, and the driver’s radio murmured a trot song he didn’t recognise. Evening has settled in slowly, like a tired blanket being pulled over the city. Streetlights glow a soft orange. The air smells faintly of fried chicken drifting from Sinchon and the sharp sweetness of fallen cherry blossoms beginning to rot on the pavement.

Wonwoo pays the driver. The man nods and drives away without looking back.

Silence follows. Not complete silence; there is always movement in Seoul, but a quieter kind. Footsteps. A scooter engine. Someone laughing too loudly in the distance.

Wonwoo stands beside his suitcases for a moment longer than necessary.

He tells himself he is taking in the view. In reality, he is giving his body time to understand that no one will tell him when to move.

He grips the suitcase handles and starts up the hill.

The path is familiar. He used to climb it with headphones in, books pressed to his chest, already tired before the day began. Now his legs carry a different memory. Two years of marching have taught them a rhythm that does not belong here. His steps fall too even, too measured, like he is still following invisible commands.

A group of students overtakes him, rushing uphill with plastic cups of iced coffee swinging in their hands. Their voices bounce off the stone walls. Their laughter is bright and careless. They smell like citrus detergent and sweet syrup.

Wonwoo smells like disinfectant, metal locker dust, and the starch of fatigues.

By the time he reaches the dormitory, his wrists ache from the luggage. The automatic doors slide open with a reluctant sigh. Warm air wraps around him—instant ramen, laundry detergent, old carpet, too many bodies living too close together.

A familiar kind of discomfort. Civilian version.

The receptionist looks up from her desk.
"Jeon Wonwoo?"

"Yes."

She checks a list, hands him a keycard, points toward the staircase. Her tone is polite and efficient. He is processed smoothly. No fuss. No welcome home.

He climbs to the fourth floor. The stairwell is narrow. Someone has stuck a cartoon bear sticker on the handrail. The corner peels loose, curling away from the plastic.

He notices it. He does not touch it.

His room is smaller than he remembers dorm rooms being. Bed. Desk. Wardrobe. A window facing the inner courtyard. Cherry blossom petals scatter across the concrete below, pale and weightless, gathering in corners where the wind can’t reach.

He sets his suitcases down. He doesn’t unpack.

He sits on the bed.

The mattress sinks under him. His body pauses, waiting for instruction.

None comes.

In the military, silence always meant waiting for the next command. Here, silence belongs only to him.

He sits in it anyway.

His phone buzzes.

Soonyoung: You're back, right?? GS25. Now. No excuses.

Wonwoo exhales quietly. The breath feels like permission.

He replies: Give me ten minutes.

He doesn’t need ten. He only needs to look in the mirror once, to make sure the person who returned looks like someone who belongs here.

In the shared bathroom, fluorescent light hums overhead. Someone’s shampoo smells like green apples. Water runs in a neighbouring sink. Wonwoo splashes his face. Droplets cling to his eyelashes. His reflection looks composed. A little too composed. Like a person built to endure things quietly.

He dries his face and leaves.

The GS25 sits at the edge of campus like a tiny lighthouse. Fluorescent light spills onto the pavement. Plastic stools line the wall. The hum of vending machines fills the gaps between conversations.

The automatic door chimes as he steps out.

“Soilder Jeon!” Soonyoung calls.

Soonyoung jogs over first, grin wide, movements loose and bright. Mingyu follows, tall enough to block half the store light, already laughing. Jihoon walks behind them, holding a triangle kimbap like it is the only stable thing in the universe. Minghao stands slightly apart, hoodie pulled up, eyes scanning the street like he is reading a scene only he can see.

Soonyoung is already in his space. Mingyu’s arm drops over his shoulder. Jihoon hands him food without asking. Minghao stands close enough that the circle feels complete.

Mingyu slaps his shoulder. “You got thinner.”

“I didn’t,” Wonwoo answers.

“You did,” Mingyu insists. “Military scam.”

Soonyoung shoves a beer into his hand. “Welcome back. Drink.”

“I haven’t eaten.”

“Drink first. Eat later,” Soonyoung declares, as if passing universal law.

Jihoon nods. “Reasonable.”

Wonwoo sits. The stool wobbles. He adjusts his weight until it steadies.

They talk around him. Noise and warmth and easy familiarity.

Soonyoung complains about club recruitment. Mingyu brags about gym numbers. Jihoon mutters about course registration errors. Minghao listens and drops quiet comments that land neatly in the conversation, precise as placed stones.

Wonwoo answers when addressed. He laughs when expected. He says, “It was fine,” when they ask about the military.

No one asks about home. No one needs to. They understand without saying it: some things are better left unspoken until someone chooses to open the door themselves.

The night cools. The plastic stool hardens under him. Condensation gathers on his beer can and runs down his fingers in slow trails.

Minghao checks his phone, then slides it back into his pocket.

“Now that you’re back,” he says, “you’re going to have to catch up. Second-year courses don’t wait for soldiers.”

Jihoon nods. “You’ll need to pick electives carefully. Some upper-year classes fill fast.”

Mingyu leans back on his stool, stretching his legs. “You could take third-year courses straight away. Show off a little.”

Soonyoung points at Wonwoo. “He absolutely will. Look at his face. Already calculating.”

Wonwoo blinks once. He isn’t, but he lets them believe it.

Minghao continues, voice even. “One of the first-years did exactly that last semester. Took a third-year project class.”

Soonyoung perks up immediately. “And aced it. Polite too. Like, suspiciously polite.”

Mingyu laughs. “He apologised to a chair yesterday. I watched it happen.”

Jihoon adds, “He’s competent. And annoyingly good-looking.”

Wonwoo listens. He nods at the right intervals. His fingers stay wrapped around the can, steady and unmoving.

“What’s his name?” he asks.

The question leaves him before he considers it. Just a social reflex. Proof of participation.

Minghao answers without ceremony.

“Wen Junhui.”

 

The name lands, like a key turning in a lock that has not been opened since he was sixteen.

Sound thins around him. The laughter flattens. The hum of the vending machine grows too loud. The beer can in his hand feels colder than it should.

Something else moves forward instead. A stairwell that smells of rubber mats. A third-floor practice room with a flickering fluorescent light. A boy sitting at a piano bench, sleeves rolled up, fingers smudged with graphite. A quiet voice shaping Korean syllables carefully, as if each one must be handled with care. His own name spoken softly. Once. Like it mattered.

Wonwoo does not move.

He keeps his face neutral. Polite. Present.

“Oh,” he says.

The word sounds correct. The right tone. The right weight.

The others keep talking. Mingyu and Soonyoung argue about gym memberships. Jihoon corrects them without raising his voice. Minghao looks down at his phone again.

Wonwoo hears them. Technically. But behind his eyes, a narrow hallway has opened. At the end of it, a boy hums an unfinished melody, ink-stained fingers resting on ivory keys.

Wonwoo closes the hallway gently.

He takes a sip of beer. It tastes warm.

Wonwoo does not call his parents that night.

He tells himself it is because it is late. Because they will already be asleep. Because there is nothing new to report. All of these are true. None of them are the reason.

He sits at his dorm desk instead, laptop unopened, hands folded loosely. The chair creaks every time he shifts his weight. He makes himself sit still.

He thinks about the house he stayed in for the past two weeks.

The marble floors that never held dust. The living room where no one raised their voice. The long dining table where conversations were negotiations disguised as concern.

His father had poured him a cup of tea the day after discharge. Not because he wanted to. Because that was what fathers did when sons returned as men. His mother had smiled, proud and tired. His younger brother had asked if the army was scary. Wonwoo had said no.

His father had asked about plans. Just like someone confirming a delivery schedule.

Internships. Graduate school. The company. The family’s expectations moving forward.

Wonwoo had nodded at all the right places. He had learned the timing years ago. When to agree. When to say nothing. When to swallow something that might have been a different life.

He had gone to bed that night in his childhood room, where the shelves still held trophies he didn’t remember winning. He had stared at the ceiling and felt the old air settle over him, thick and familiar.

That was when he decided to return to university early. The collar of his shirt had felt too tight at the dinner table, the air too polished, the curtains too heavy.

Back in the dorm, he opens the orientation pamphlet he was given earlier. He flips through it. Maps. Cafeteria hours. Counseling services. Emergency numbers.

He lingers on none of it.

He closes the pamphlet.

He thinks, without intending to, of a boy sitting in a practice room when he was sixteen, sleeves rolled up, fingers stained with pencil graphite, saying:

“I don’t think I want to live like that.”

Wonwoo had laughed at the time. Had said something clever. Something safe.

He understands now that it was the first confession he ever ignored.

He leans back in his chair and lets his head rest against the wall.

Tomorrow, he will resume being a student. Tomorrow, life will move forward again.

He does not yet know what is already waiting for him in that tomorrow.

But his chest feels tight anyway.

Wonwoo wakes before his alarm again.

The dorm is quiet. His roommate’s breathing rises and falls evenly. Outside the window, the courtyard is damp from overnight rain. Cherry petals cling to the ground in small, stubborn clusters.

He dresses without hurry. Jeans. A plain shirt. A light jacket. Civilian clothes still feel like costume, but less than yesterday. He checks his timetable once, then again, as if repetition will make the day predictable.

By eight thirty, he is walking across campus. The air smells of wet stone and coffee. Students move in loose streams toward lecture halls, umbrellas dripping, backpacks slung low.

He finds the building easily. He has walked these paths before. Memory fills in the shortcuts.

The lecture hall door is already open. Inside, rows of seats rise in gentle tiers. The room hums with small conversations, chair legs scraping, pages turning. A projector displays the course title in blue text on a white screen.

Wonwoo steps in and pauses near the back.

Most seats are taken. First-years cluster toward the front, eager or anxious. Upper-years sit farther back, relaxed, familiar with the rhythm of semester starts.

He chooses a seat near the middle. Not too visible. Not too hidden.

He sits and takes out a notebook. He uncaps his pen. The small, familiar actions settle him.

Around him, voices drift.

“So this class is hard, right?”

“I heard the professor is kind.”

“Do we need the textbook?”

Wonwoo listens without participating. He is good at this. Being present without drawing attention. Existing like a quiet piece of furniture.

Then the door opens again.

He hears it before he sees it.

A voice, clear and even, saying in careful Korean, “Is this seat taken?”

Wonwoo’s pen pauses mid-air.

He looks up.

Wen Junhui stands in the aisle, one hand resting lightly on the back of a chair. His hair is damp from the rain. A strand sticks to his forehead. He wears a simple hoodie and jeans, nothing remarkable, and yet the room seems to adjust around him, subtly, without anyone meaning to.

The student he asked shakes their head quickly. “No, go ahead.”

Junhui smiles. Polite. Easy. A smile that does not demand anything in return.

He sits two rows in front of Wonwoo, slightly to the left.

Wonwoo does not look away.

Not immediately.

He catalogues, without intending to, observation stacking neatly on observation the way he organises everything else that might otherwise spill.

Junhui’s shoulders are broader than they used to be. His posture is straighter. His movements are slower, more deliberate. His hands are clean now. No ink stains. No bitten nails. His Korean sounds natural. The careful shaping of syllables is gone. Only a faint trace of an accent remains, soft at the edges.

And yet.

The way he lines up his pen and pencil on the desk. The slight tilt of his head when he listens. The habit of tucking damp hair behind his ear.

Familiar gestures. Muscle memory surviving time.

Wonwoo blinks once and looks down at his notebook.

The professor enters. The room settles. The lecture begins.

Words flow. Slides change. Pens move across paper. Laptops click.

Wonwoo writes. He listens. He copies diagrams. He underlines key terms. His handwriting stays steady. His notes are neat and usable. He does not miss content. He has always been good at functioning while thinking of other things.

And yet, his attention returns, again and again, to the figure two rows ahead.

He observes the way Junhui’s brow furrows when concentrating. The way his shoulders relax when he understands something. The brief moment he glances around, as if checking whether he belongs in this room.

Wonwoo understands that glance.

Halfway through the lecture, a memory arrives without invitation.

A practice room. Third floor. A piano bench. Junhui sitting cross-legged, hoodie slipping off one shoulder, saying in halting Korean, “This place is too quiet.”

Wonwoo writes another line of notes.

The memory fades.

The lecture continues.

By the time the professor dismisses the class, Wonwoo’s notebook is full. Margins clean. Structure intact. Everything in its proper place.

Students stand. Chairs scrape. Bags zip.

Junhui gathers his things efficiently. He stands, slings his backpack over one shoulder, and leaves the room with the same quiet ease he entered with.

Wonwoo remains seated for a moment longer.

He closes his notebook.

His hand rests on the cover, steady.

He thinks, with a quiet kind of surprise, that he did not expect this.

Not the coincidence of the same university. That much had been inevitable.

Not even the same class. Universities are full of shared corridors and overlapping timetables.

What he did not expect was the way his body had remembered first. The pause of his hand. The careful counting of breaths. The sudden clarity of a name spoken aloud.

He files the observation away, as he always does.

Later, he tells himself, he will decide what it means.

He leaves the lecture hall later than most.

He takes his time packing his notebook, aligning the edges of his papers, zipping his bag fully closed. The room empties around him in waves. Voices fade down the stairwell. Doors swing. Close. Silence returns in pockets.

When he steps into the corridor, it is already crowded. Students flow in both directions, umbrellas closing, phone screens glowing, backpacks bumping shoulders. The air smells of wet concrete and coffee lids snapped shut.

He walks toward the staircase.

Halfway there, he stops.

Junhui stands near the wall, slightly apart from the current of bodies. He is looking at his phone. Two other first-years stand nearby, one talking animatedly while the other listens in quiet amusement. Their voices rise and fall like background music.

Wonwoo does not know how long he stands there before Junhui looks up.

Their eyes meet.

No surprise crosses Junhui’s face. If there was any, it has already been stored away. His expression is open, neutral, polite.

He inclines his head in a small bow.

Wonwoo returns the bow. The movement is automatic, ingrained.

Junhui nods once more. Not hurried. Not lingering.

Then Seungkwan calls his name. Junhui turns toward him. He smiles lightly at the others, says something Wonwoo does not catch, and walks away with them into the flow of students.

He does not look back.

Wonwoo remains where he is.

People pass around him. A shoulder brushes his arm. Someone mutters an apology. The corridor continues breathing, moving, living. The strap of his bag bites into his shoulder.

He stands still for a moment longer.

Then he adjusts the strap of his bag and walks in the opposite direction.

His pace is steady.

No one would guess anything has shifted at all.

Wonwoo does not plan to walk toward the practice building.

His feet simply choose the path. Downhill, past the staircase where freshmen still pose for photos, past the café fogged with breath and espresso, past the stone wall where ivy claws upward slowly. The sky darkens in layers. Campus lights come on one by one, as if keeping watch.

The practice building door is propped open. Warm air leaks out, carrying the faint scent of wood polish, dust, and old sheet music.

He stops outside.

A piano plays inside. Not a performance. Practice. Someone repeating a passage, stopping, correcting, trying again. The sound is thin but persistent.

Wonwoo closes his eyes.

He is sixteen again.

The building is newer then. The rubber mats in the stairwell smell sharp and clean. He is leaving the gym, towel around his neck, earbuds in, sweat cooling on his skin.

On the third floor landing, a door stands open. Piano notes drift out, uneven and stubborn.

He pauses. Looks in.

A boy sits cross-legged on a bench, sleeves rolled to the elbow, hoodie slipping off one shoulder. His fingers are stained with graphite. Sheet music is scattered around him like fallen leaves. He presses a key. Frowns. Presses it again.

Wonwoo taps the doorframe with his knuckles.

The boy startles, looks up, eyes wide and dark. He says something in Mandarin first, then switches to careful Korean.

“Ah. Sorry. Is it too loud?”

His accent is noticeable. His grammar slightly off. His voice soft but steady.

Wonwoo shakes his head. “It’s fine.”

The boy hesitates, then gestures to the bench. “You… want to listen?”

Wonwoo should say no. He should go home. He should not step into random rooms with strangers.

He steps in anyway.

He is seventeen.

They sit on the stair landing between gym and practice rooms, plastic cups of vending machine coffee cooling between them. Junhui pronounces Korean words slowly. Wonwoo corrects him. Junhui repeats until satisfied.

“What’s your name in Chinese?” Wonwoo asks.

Junhui takes his finger and traces a character on Wonwoo’s palm. The touch is light, careful, as if he is writing on something that could vanish if pressed too hard.

He begins with a tiny dot at the top. Then a horizontal line. A slanting stroke falling away. Another line crossing through the centre, anchoring the shape.

“This is Wen,” Junhui says. His fingertip rests briefly at the crossing point, where the character feels balanced.

He shifts closer, hand never leaving Wonwoo’s skin. This time the motion is more intricate. Two strokes form the outline of a standing figure. Shorter lines build inside it, layered and precise.

“And this is Jun,” he says quietly.

His finger continues beside it, drawing a new structure. A small spark of strokes at the top. Lines assembled carefully underneath, patient and deliberate.

“And this,” he finishes, voice softer still, “is Hui.”

The strokes tickle. Wonwoo does not pull his hand away.

He is seventeen, later.

Junhui leans against him on the late bus ride home, half asleep, breath warm through thin fabric. Wonwoo holds himself still, afraid movement will break something fragile.

Outside, Seoul rushes by in neon streaks.

He is almost eighteen.

They sit on the rooftop of Junhui’s building. Plastic chairs. Convenience store snacks. Junhui’s Korean is fluent now. He speaks without stopping to search for words.

“Wonwoo. Jeon Wonwoo. I like you,” Junhui says, staring at the city instead of at him. His voice is small. His hands rest on his knees. Still.

Wonwoo hears the sentence. Understands it. Files it away carefully, like something too precious to handle roughly.

He says, "Junhui, me too".

Junhui smiles.

The piano inside the building falters. Stops. Starts again.

Wonwoo opens his eyes.

The hallway is empty. The present waits where he left it.

He tells himself that was long ago. That they were young. That first feelings grow dull with time.

He repeats it quietly, like a line memorised for an exam.

I do not love him anymore.

The sentence sits in his mind, neat and complete.

He tests it once more.

I do not love him anymore.

Something shifts behind his ribs, subtle and dangerous, like ice cracking under steady weight.

He does not go inside. He turns away, hands in his pockets, shoulders relaxed, expression composed.

From the outside, he looks like a man walking home. From the inside, he is moving carefully around a memory that has just become real again.

Chapter 2: a day that should have been ordinary

Summary:

He returned believing he was mended.
He is not.

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Wonwoo wakes before his alarm.

The dorm room is still dim, grey light pressing softly through the blinds. His roommate turns in bed, mutters something unintelligible, and settles again. The radiator ticks. Somewhere down the corridor, a door closes with a muted thud.

Wonwoo sits up immediately.

The movement is precise, practised. Blanket folded. Pillow straightened. He stands, feet finding the same spot on the floor each morning without thought. The small room feels less like a place to rest and more like a station between destinations.

In the shared bathroom, fluorescent lights hum overhead. The tiles are cold beneath his bare feet. Someone’s toothbrush cup stands crooked on the counter. He straightens it without thinking, then catches himself and lets it be.

He washes his face. Water runs down his wrists. He watches it disappear into the drain.

Back in the room, he lines up what he will carry today: notebook, pen, timetable printout, student ID. Edges aligned. Corners squared. The arrangement calms him. Order is something he can still control.

His phone buzzes with a notification from the family group chat. A photo of breakfast. A brief message from his mother: Eat well today.

He does not reply. Not because he does not care, but because any response will open a conversation he is not ready to have. Instead, he closes the app and sets the phone face-down on the desk.

He thinks, briefly, of the weight of family.

At home, they never call it a company. They call it a foundation. As if what they built is something meant to support rather than something that weighs on the backs of thousands. As if steel and glass and profit can be moral, simply because they say it is.

The Jeon Group began with a single construction firm, his grandfather breaking ground on roads that did not yet exist on maps. Over decades it spread outward—bridges, shipping yards, steel plants, apartment complexes rising where farmland once slept. Logistics followed. Retail followed. Glass towers bearing the family name now stand in cities Wonwoo has never visited but is expected to one day command. People say the family name with the same tone they use for weather systems. Something vast. Something inevitable. Something you do not argue with, only prepare for.

Wonwoo grew up learning that inheritance was not a gift. It was gravity. A duty measured in grades, discipline, and the absence of scandal. Praise came rarely, precise as a scalpel. Love was quiet, conditional, often indistinguishable from expectation.

You are the future, his grandfather used to say. Not our future. Just the future. As if he had been born already mid-sentence, mid-obligation.

He learned early that his worth was not in being wanted, but in being reliable. Not in being loved, but in being useful. Even now, he is not sure whether anyone in that house knows how to love without calculating return. Or whether he himself would recognise love if it came freely, without cost.

Responsibility, he was taught, is the only proof of affection that matters.

He tells himself he believes that.

He had performed the role expected of him with quiet efficiency. The same way he learned to fold his blanket in the army. The same way he learned to keep his face still.

He does not think, not directly, of why he enlisted so early. He does not allow himself that word, the one that sits too close to the ribs and loosens the breath. Instead, he tells himself it was a necessary step. A strategic decision. A way to keep pace with a future already laid out before him.

It is easier to believe he chose the army for discipline, for timing, for advantage. Easier than admitting he needed distance from a life that had started to feel unbearable in its quietness. Easier than admitting he did not trust himself to stay in one place without breaking.

One year passed. The days were filled. His body grew stronger. His face learned stillness. Whatever ache he carried dulled at the edges, not gone, only pushed somewhere deeper.

He returned believing he was mended.

He is not.

He checks the university portal. Course registration. Credit requirements. Graduation conditions. Timelines that stretch forward in neat, predictable lines.

It is reassuring, in a way.

He is behind his cohort. He is also exactly where he is supposed to be. Both things are true at once.

He puts on his jacket.

The window shows the practice building across the courtyard. Its lights are still on, even this early. Someone must have stayed late. Or woken early. He wonders who it is, then stops himself.

A name hovers at the edge of his mind.

He thinks of internship applications instead. Of résumé formats. Of the polite way to answer interview questions. He rehearses sentences silently, lips barely moving.

The name returns anyway.

He notices this. The mind circling. He redirects again, deliberately, like steering a stubborn cart away from a ditch. He thinks of tomorrow’s lecture. Of the reading list. Of the cost of textbooks.

The name waits.

He exhales, slow and controlled.

There is nothing to be done about thoughts. Only about actions. He can manage actions.

He locks his door and steps into the corridor.

Outside, the air smells of damp concrete and coffee from the café already open near the main gate. Students pass with backpacks and earphones, umbrellas folded under their arms. The campus is waking, stretching into another day that promises to be ordinary.

He walks toward the cafeteria.

He tells himself he is hungry.

He is not sure if that is true, but it is reason enough.

 

The cafeteria is loud in the morning. Chairs scrape. Trays clatter. Steam rises from soup pots. Conversations overlap in fragments and laughter.

Mingyu spots him first.

“Soldier Jeon,” he calls, waving a chopstick like a flag. “Over here.”

Soonyoung is already mid-story, hands moving faster than his words. Jihoon sits opposite him, expression patient, eyes half-lidded. Minghao sits beside Mingyu, quietly picking at a plate they appear to be sharing without discussion.

Wonwoo sits down. A tray appears in front of him a moment later. Jihoon must have ordered extra.

“Eat,” Soonyoung says. “You look like you’re thinking again.”

Wonwoo picks up his spoon.

They talk around him. Course registration problems. Club schedules. A professor who assigns too much reading. Mingyu complains about the gym being crowded. Minghao responds with a single sentence that makes Mingyu laugh harder than the complaint deserved.

Wonwoo listens. He answers when addressed. He does not ask questions that are not necessary.

“So,” Soonyoung says between bites. “That first-year we told you about last night? He hasn’t joined us lately. Busy semester start, I guess.”

Mingyu shrugs. “Freshmen are like that. Overachievers.”

Jihoon hums in agreement. “He’ll appear again. Minghao invited him to the project wrap-up dinner next week.”

Minghao nods once. “He said yes.”

Wonwoo keeps his gaze on his food.

He does not ask who they are talking about. He does not need to.

He stores the information quietly, without outward reaction, the way he once stored phone numbers, schedules, directions. Small useful things. Things to be kept safe.

He takes another spoonful of soup.

The broth is hot. It burns his tongue slightly. He does not show it.

Across the table, Mingyu shifts, his knee brushing Minghao’s. Minghao moves half a centimetre closer, almost absent-mindedly. 

When breakfast ends, he gathers his tray. He stands. He waves to his friends. He walks away.

He tells himself it is just another morning.

He almost believes it.

Wonwoo walks across campus with his hands in his pockets. The sky has cleared; sunlight glints off puddles left behind by morning rain. Students stream past him in loose currents, laughing, hurrying, arguing about class locations. He matches their pace without trying to.

At the library entrance, he stops to print a syllabus. The machine hums, spits out paper, jams once, then frees itself. He smooths the page, folds it neatly, and tucks it into his notebook.

When he turns, Junhui is at the next printer.

He does not hear him arrive. He only notices the small shift in the air, the presence beside him. Junhui stands with one hand resting on the machine, eyes scanning the screen. His hair is dry now. The hoodie from the other day has been replaced with a light jacket. He looks like any other freshman. He looks as beautiful as Wonwoo's memory of him, only visited during his rare moments of weakness. 

Wonwoo does not speak first.

Junhui finishes printing. He lifts the paper, aligns the edges, and slides it into his folder. Then he looks up.

Their eyes meet.

Junhui inclines his head in a polite bow. “Sunbae.”

The first syllable of Junhui's name is already at the tip of Wonwoo's tongue when he realises that no, he is not ready to call out that name. He does not know what calling Junhui's name will do to the calmness he fights hard to maintain. 

Wonwoo tilts his head, making it appear natural. “Hello.”

Junhui steps aside first, giving Wonwoo space to move past. He smells faintly of laundry detergent and something clean. No trace of the practice room. No trace of late-night buses. No trace of anything that used to be.

Wonwoo walks forward. Their shoulders almost brush. They do not.

By the time he reaches the door, Junhui is already gone, swallowed into the library crowd.

Wonwoo pauses with his hand on the handle.

He tells himself the exchange was polite. Normal. Appropriate.

He tells himself there was nothing else to say.

He pushes the door open and steps outside.

Later, he sits alone at a cafeteria table, notebook open, pen resting between his fingers. He writes down nothing. He watches the reflection of fluorescent lights ripple faintly across the window glass instead, layered over the movement of students passing behind his own mirrored outline.

The chair opposite him remains empty. Someone has left a half-finished coffee there, lid askew, condensation ring spreading slowly on the plastic tabletop. He does not move it. It feels like an intrusion into a space that is not his.

A laugh rises near the entrance. He turns his head without thinking.

Junhui is there, flanked by Soonyoung and Jihoon. Mingyu arrives moments later, ducking through the doorframe, voice carrying across the room. Minghao follows, quiet as ever, sliding naturally into the space beside Mingyu.

Junhui laughs too. Not loudly. Just enough that his eyes curve and his shoulders loosen, the tension he carries around Wonwoo nowhere to be found here. He looks at ease. 

Wonwoo’s pen presses too hard into the page. A dot of ink bleeds through the paper, spreading in slow, dark petals.

He stares at it.

He does not remember pressing down.

He wonders, briefly, if this is what it means to leave something behind. Not absence, but presence in the wrong places. A life continuing without him. A warmth he once knew, now observed through glass.

He closes the notebook carefully, as if sealing something fragile inside.

He leaves the cafeteria before any of them notice him, moving through the doors and into the late afternoon light where the air smells of wet leaves and exhaust.

That night, in his dorm room, he scrolls through the university portal again. Internship listings. Application deadlines. The words line up neatly, offering futures that require no risk, no vulnerability, no backward glances.

He bookmarks three postings he is not yet eligible for. Deletes two. Rearranges a folder. Adjusts a spreadsheet he has made for no one but himself.

He tells himself this is what he chose.

He tells himself it is enough.

A thought appears, quiet and insistent.

If he had stayed.

He cuts it off before it can finish. Opens another tab. Reads a page without absorbing it. Closes it again.

The room smells faintly of detergent and instant noodles from somewhere down the hall. His roommate is out. The silence feels too large for the space.

He turns off the light.

In the dark, the room shrinks around him. The mattress dips under his weight. Springs creak. He counts his breaths until they slow.

Sleep arrives eventually.

 

Friday arrives with rain.

Mingyu sends a message to the group chat: Convenience store tonight? My treat.

Soonyoung responds first. Jihoon follows. Minghao reacts with a single thumbs-up.

Wonwoo reads the messages and puts the phone aside.

He does not ask whether Junhui will be there.

He arrives anyway.

The GS25 near campus is warm and bright, plastic tables crowded with cups and snack wrappers. A small heater hums near the window. Outside, rain draws silver lines down the glass.

Soonyoung is already halfway through a story when Wonwoo enters. Jihoon is leaning against the counter, choosing drinks. Mingyu stands by the refrigerator, door open, cold air spilling onto his legs. Minghao sits at the corner table, umbrella resting against his chair.

Mingyu is the first to notice him.

“Wonwoo,” he calls, lifting a bottle in greeting. “You’re late. Come here.”

Wonwoo steps closer. The group shifts instinctively to make space. Mingyu gestures toward the person beside Minghao.

“Oh, right. You haven’t met yet,” Mingyu says, tone casual. “This is Wen Junhui. First year in Hao’s department. Junhui, this is Jeon Wonwoo. He's the guy who went and enlisted after finishing our first year. He's doing business and leadership.” 

Junhui turns fully toward him, hands wrapped around a paper cup. His hair is damp at the edges. His jacket is zipped to his throat. He looks as beautiful as the version of Junhui that visits Wonwoo's dream sometimes. That Junhui always looks at Wonwoo with an expression full of warmth.

This Junhui offers Wonwoo a slight bow. “Nice to meet you, sunbae.”

Wonwoo inclines his head in return. “Likewise.”

Mingyu nods, satisfied, and turns back to the refrigerator. Conversation picks up again, a beat slower than before.

Soonyoung pokes at his cup noodles with his chopsticks. “Midterms are going to kill me. I swear Professor Han assigns readings just to watch us suffer.”

Jihoon shrugs. “You say that every semester.”

“Because every semester he proves me right,” Soonyoung says, slumping forward dramatically.

Mingyu laughs. “At least you read. Some of us are surviving on vibes.”

Minghao finally looks up. “Your vibes are bad.”

“That hurts,” Mingyu says, hand to his chest. “Junhui, tell him my vibes are good.”

Junhui chuckles softly. “They’re… energetic.”

“So polite,” Soonyoung says, impressed. “Freshman manners. We lost those years ago.”

Junhui smiles, small and even. “I’m still adjusting.”

Conversation flows easily around them, the way groups settle into shared tiredness after a week of classes.

Soonyoung talks. Jihoon interjects dry remarks. Mingyu teases everyone equally. Minghao listens, occasionally adding a sentence that shifts the entire conversation by a few degrees.

Junhui fits into the rhythm without effort. He laughs softly. He answers questions. He offers snacks around the table. When Minghao speaks Mandarin to him once, just a phrase, Junhui responds in kind. Their voices are low, private.

Wonwoo does not understand the words.

He understands everything else.

Mingyu returns from the counter with skewers.

“Eat,” he says, placing one in front of Junhui. “You barely touched anything.”

Junhui smiles politely. “I’m fine.”

Mingyu pushes the skewer closer. “Come on. It’s good.”

Junhui hesitates. His fingers hover over the stick, then pull back slightly.

Wonwoo hears himself speak before he decides to.

“He doesn’t eat that.”

The table quiets.

Soonyoung blinks. Jihoon raises an eyebrow. Mingyu pauses with his hand still on the counter. Minghao turns his head, slow and careful.

Junhui looks at Wonwoo. Then he reaches out, picks up the skewer, and takes a bite.

“It’s okay,” he says calmly. “I do now.”

He chews. Swallows. Smiles.

The conversation restarts, a little more cautiously. Not long after, Soonyoung leans back in his chair, studying them both.

“So,” he says, tone light but direct. “You two know each other?”

Wonwoo feels the weight of the question. He does not look at Junhui. He does not look at anyone.

He hears his own voice answer. “Yeah.”

Rain continues to fall outside. The heater hums. A delivery bell chimes as another customer enters.

Notes:

I write Wonwoo in this story as someone shaped by structure before he ever learned how to want. He was raised to believe responsibility is love, usefulness is worth, and self-control is virtue. He does not fall in love easily, but when he does, it is quiet, consuming, and terrifying to him. In this fic, his greatest conflict is not whether he loves Junhui. It is whether he allows himself to believe that love is something he is permitted to keep.

Their history sits beneath every interaction in this story, unspoken but alive. There was a time when Junhui felt like the only place Wonwoo could rest, and a time when Wonwoo chose to walk away from that place. Now they exist in the same spaces again, pretending to be strangers, carrying memories that refuse to stay buried. Wonwoo tells himself he has moved on. But the truth is simpler and harder: he loved Junhui once, deeply, and he never learned how to let that go. Seeing him again pulls at something he spent years forcing into silence.

If he is hurting now, it is because he walked away from a love he did not know how to keep, and time did not fix what he hoped distance would.

Thank you for reading and walking slowly with them.

Chapter 3: Some choices are made even before they are spoken

Summary:

“You are a Jeon,” she said. “One day, you will have people depending on you. Thousands of them. You must never place someone in a life they cannot endure.”

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Wonwoo’s palms stung from the ball.

It struck the polished floor, rebounded into his hands, left again. The rhythm was steady, almost meditative, the only place in his day where force was permitted to exist without explanation. Around him, sneakers squeaked and bodies collided in controlled aggression. Shouts rose and fell. The air smelled of rubber, sweat, and disinfectant.

He was good at this. He was not excellent, but he was precise. His movements were efficient, economical, as if he were solving a problem rather than playing a game. Every pass landed where it should. Every shot was calculated. Even here, he was careful.

This gym was his sanctioned rebellion. His family allowed it because it built discipline, teamwork, physical resilience. It fit neatly into the image of the heir who excelled in everything placed before him. He understood this arrangement. He benefited from it. He did not question it.

Still, some days the walls felt closer than they should.

That day was one of those days.

He called for a substitution, stepped off the court, and headed toward the exit. No one questioned it. He was reliable. When he left, he always returned.

The corridor outside was cooler. The noise of the game dulled behind closed doors, replaced by the hum of fluorescent lights and distant footsteps. He rolled his shoulders, breathed out, loosening something that had tightened too long in his chest.

He told himself he only needed water.

Halfway down the hallway, a sound reached him.

Piano.

Not the scattered practice of beginners. It was a melody unfolding with quiet certainty, like petals drifting from a branch in slow motion. Light and precise. Falling, yet never quite touching the ground.

He stopped walking.

The music continued, threading through the corridor, soft but insistent. It did not belong to this place of basketballs and vending machines and parents waiting in cars outside. It belonged somewhere else. Somewhere calm.

He followed it without deciding to.

A door ahead stood slightly ajar. Warm light spilled onto the linoleum floor. The piano grew clearer with each step, each note settling into him in a way he did not immediately understand.

He reached the doorway and paused.

Inside, a boy sat at the piano bench, back straight, shoulders relaxed. A high school uniform hung neatly on his frame. His fingers moved across the keys with fluid confidence, long and slender, dancing rather than pressing. His hair fell over his forehead, shadowing eyes fixed on the instrument, fully absorbed.

Wonwoo did not enter.

He simply watched.

For the first time that day, something inside him loosened without effort.

He did not yet know that his life had shifted.

He only knew that the music had reached him, and he had nowhere else to go but forward.

Junhui sensed him before he saw him.

The last note lingered in the room, thin and trembling, and when he turned his head, he found a stranger standing in the doorway. For a moment, neither of them moved. The fluorescent light above flickered once, twice.

Then Junhui startled.

The sudden shift sent the bench skidding backward. His feet missed the floor. He landed awkwardly on the carpet with a small gasp, palms bracing against the ground.

Wonwoo moved without thinking.

He stepped inside, crossed the room, and offered his hand. The boy’s fingers were cool when they met his, lighter than he expected. Junhui rose quickly, brushing dust from his trousers, cheeks flushed in embarrassment.

“I’m sorry,” Junhui said in careful Korean. “I didn’t know someone was there.”

Wonwoo shook his head. “I shouldn’t have stood in the doorway.”

Junhui laughed softly, the sound awkward but genuine. “You didn’t make any noise. I thought I was alone.”

Wonwoo glanced at the piano. The sheet music lay open, covered in neat pencil markings. “You play well,” he said.

Junhui blinked, then lowered his gaze. “It’s just practice.”

Silence settled, not uncomfortable, just new.

Junhui lifted his head again. “Did you come from basketball?” he asked, nodding toward the corridor.

Wonwoo looked down at his jersey, still damp with sweat. “Yes. Practice.”

Junhui smiled. “Then we are the same. Escaping.”

The phrasing was slightly off, but the meaning landed cleanly.

He hesitated, then added, “I’m Junhui.”

Wonwoo studied him for a moment. He noticed the slight accent shaping his vowels, the careful way he chose his words, the faint patch of fabric behind his ear that signaled a pheromone blocker. He took it all in without reacting, quietly storing the details as he always did, not yet sure why they felt important.

“I’m Wonwoo,” he said.

Junhui’s eyes brightened a little. “Nice to meet you, Wonwoo.”

The name sounded different in his mouth. Softer.

Junhui gestured to the bench. “If you want… you can sit. Next time you escape.” He paused, then added, almost as an afterthought, “After practice is also okay. I don’t have many friends.”

Wonwoo did not know why he said yes.

But he did.

And for the first time in a long while, the walls around his life felt just a little farther apart.

Wonwoo returned the next day.

He told himself it was curiosity. Nothing more. The piano piece had been unfinished when he left. He wanted to know how it ended. That was all.

He arrived earlier than usual for basketball practice, left earlier than he needed to, and walked the corridor with the quiet certainty of someone who had already chosen without admitting it. The door to the practice room was open this time, as if expecting him.

Junhui was there, hunched slightly over the keys, sleeves rolled to his elbows. When he noticed Wonwoo in the doorway, he smiled in recognition, easy and unguarded, as though they had met many times already.

“You came,” Junhui said.

Wonwoo nodded and stepped inside.

He sat on the bench at a polite distance, hands resting on his knees. Junhui resumed playing. The melody filled the small room, softened by the padded walls and the dull hum of the building outside. Wonwoo listened, letting the sound settle into the spaces inside him that basketball could not reach.

Days folded into weeks.

Sometimes Wonwoo arrived still flushed from the court, hair damp, breath uneven. Sometimes he arrived after his driver dropped him off early, pretending he had stayed longer at school. Sometimes Junhui was already waiting. Sometimes Wonwoo sat outside the door until he heard the first note before entering.

They spoke between pieces.

Junhui corrected his Korean when he stumbled over unfamiliar words. Wonwoo suggested books, writing down titles in Junhui’s notebook with careful handwriting. Junhui showed him Chinese characters, tracing strokes on paper, then laughing when Wonwoo held the pen too stiffly.

On days when Junhui grew frustrated with a passage, Wonwoo counted the repetitions quietly. On days when Wonwoo looked tired, Junhui placed a bottle of water beside him without comment.

Neither of them spoke of friendship. They simply met.

One evening, rain poured outside the windows, drumming steadily against the glass. Junhui closed the piano lid and stretched his fingers.

“Do you want to eat?” he asked. “There is a convenience store near my home.”

Wonwoo hesitated. He did not usually go to places without scheduled purpose.

Then he said, “Okay.”

They walked under one umbrella, shoulders nearly touching, shoes splashing through shallow puddles. At the store, they bought ice cream and sat on plastic stools by the window. Junhui talked about his younger brother, about Shenzhen, about missing the taste of food from home. Wonwoo listened and offered small questions, careful not to pry.

When it was time to leave, Wonwoo called his driver. Junhui waited with him until the car arrived, hands tucked into his jacket sleeves.

“See you tomorrow?” Junhui asked.

Wonwoo nodded.

It was already decided.

At night, Wonwoo studied longer than before, but his concentration fractured more easily. Words on the page blurred into lines of music. He told himself this was inefficient. He did nothing to stop it.

The first time they met outside the building happened without much thought on Wonwoo's part.

A film had just been released, something quiet and sentimental that Junhui had mentioned in passing. Wonwoo saw the poster near his school gate a few days later and thought of Junhui’s careful Korean, the way his eyes lifted when he spoke about stories. The invitation formed before he could decide whether it was wise.

“I’m going to see a movie this weekend,” he said when he found Junhui in the practice room. “If you want to come.”

Junhui blinked, surprised. Then smiled. “I would like that.”

They met at the station on Saturday afternoon. The crowd moved around them in steady currents: students in uniforms, parents with shopping bags, couples holding hands without thinking about it. Wonwoo noticed that Junhui kept close to him, not out of dependence, but because the world was still new and loud and fast around him.

On the train, they sat side by side, knees almost touching. Junhui leaned forward slightly to read the advertisements across from them, whispering unfamiliar Korean words under his breath. Wonwoo corrected him quietly, and Junhui repeated them, trying again until he was satisfied.

At the cinema, they shared popcorn. Junhui laughed softly at scenes that were not meant to be funny, then apologized for laughing anyway. Wonwoo watched him more than the screen. He found himself cataloguing the way Junhui’s shoulders shook when he laughed, the way his hand hovered near the popcorn bucket, the way he glanced sideways to check if Wonwoo was enjoying himself.

When the movie ended, they walked without urgency. Streetlights flickered on, washing the pavement in amber. The air smelled of fried food and rain that had not yet fallen.

“Thank you,” Junhui said. “I haven’t gone out like this since coming here.”

Wonwoo did not know what to say to that. So he said, “Any time.”

And meant it.

Later, as they parted at the station, Wonwoo realised something he had not expected.

He had enjoyed the day not because of the piano.

But because of Junhui.

The thought was small. Almost harmless.

He did not yet understand how far it would travel.

--

By the time final year arrived, time had become a tighter thing.

Wonwoo’s days filled with tutoring sessions, mock exams, strategy meetings with teachers who spoke of universities the way generals spoke of battlefields. His schedule was printed, colour-coded, laminated. His driver knew it by heart. His mother checked it every Sunday evening. His grandfather asked only one question at dinner.

“How are your scores?”

Junhui did not attend his school. He did not see the rows of students bowing to teachers, the relentless countdown to the entrance exams, the quiet panic settling into hallways. But he saw it in Wonwoo’s shoulders when he arrived at the practice room. In the slower steps. In the way he sat before speaking.

They met less.

Some days, Wonwoo stood outside the practice room door and listened to a piece end before turning away again, knowing he did not have time to enter. Some nights, Junhui waited with the piano lid closed, then left when the building lights dimmed.

They did not speak of it.

They both felt it.

Then one night, Wonwoo skipped tutoring.

He left school early, walked instead of calling his driver, let the cold air bite into his lungs until his thoughts loosened from their neat lines. He found himself at Junhui’s neighbourhood without quite remembering each turn he had taken.

The playground was empty. A lone streetlamp cast pale light over metal swings and a slide slick with frost. Junhui sat on one of the swings, feet brushing the ground, hands tucked into his coat sleeves.

“You’re here,” Junhui said, not questioning. He was just stating a fact.

Wonwoo sat on the swing beside him. The chains creaked softly as they moved.

He admitted it before he could reconsider. “I skipped. I missed you.”

The word hung between them. Junhui slowed the swing with his feet and turned, studying him as if seeing him for the first time that day. The chains creaked. Breath fogged in the cold.

Wonwoo kept his gaze forward, jaw tight, waiting for a reaction he could prepare for.

None came. Not immediately.

Junhui’s voice, when it arrived, was soft, almost curious, as though he were placing a fragile thing on the ground to see if it would break. “Jeon Wonwoo,” he said, “I think I like you.”

The words were simple. They were clear, no hesitation or flourish.

Wonwoo’s breath caught, just once.

He did not think of consequences or families. Or exams, or the future that waited like a contract already signed.

He reached out and took Junhui’s hand.

“Junhui,” he said, voice steady in a way his chest was not, “me too.”

They leaned toward each other. Junhui’s forehead brushed his. Their noses touched. Their mouths met.

The kiss was soft at first, uncertain. Then warmer. Closer. A small point of heat blooming in the cold night air.

When they parted, Junhui’s eyes were bright. Wonwoo’s heart pounded with a force no basketball game had ever pulled from him.

For a moment, under the streetlamp, the future did not exist. There was only this.

Later, lying in bed with his textbook open but unread, Wonwoo thought of Junhui’s hand in his. The quiet certainty in his voice. The warmth of his mouth.

He thought, distantly, that some things in life arrived without strategy.

After that night, they stopped pretending their meetings were accidental.

Time did not suddenly become generous. Wonwoo’s schedule remained rigid, his days partitioned into blocks of achievement. Junhui’s lessons and family obligations did not vanish. But they began to reach for each other in the narrow spaces between, as if the lack of time made each meeting more necessary.

Sometimes it was only twenty minutes in the practice room. Junhui at the piano, Wonwoo beside him on the bench, knees brushing, breath synchronising without intention. Sometimes it was a walk between stations, sharing one pair of earphones, the cord looping between them like a fragile tether. Sometimes it was sitting on the curb outside a convenience store, hands wrapped around warm cups, shoulders pressed close against the cold.

They touched more easily now.

A hand guiding the other away from a closing door. Fingers grazing a wrist while passing a notebook. Junhui leaning into Wonwoo’s side while reading over his shoulder. Wonwoo resting his palm against the back of Junhui’s neck, thumb moving in small, absent circles.

Each gesture was small. None were accidental.

They learned each other in fragments. That Junhui’s skin carried a faint scent of clean soap and something softer beneath. That Wonwoo’s voice dropped unconsciously when speaking to him alone. That silence between them did not demand filling. That closeness felt both terrifying and right.

One night, the practice building lights shut off one by one around them. They remained in the piano room, the city’s glow filtering through the window. Junhui slid down from the bench to sit on the floor, back against Wonwoo’s legs. Wonwoo rested his chin atop Junhui’s head, arms folding around him as though the position had always existed.

Junhui tilted his face up. Their mouths met again, slower this time, familiar now. The warmth that spread through Wonwoo was no longer startling. It was something he anticipated, craved, missed even before it ended.

When Junhui finally closed his eyes against his shoulder, breathing steady, Wonwoo understood something quietly, without drama.

He was falling.

It was not in a way he could step back from, or in a way that allowed careful calculation. It was something softer and sharper than anything basketball or textbooks had ever given him.

By winter, being apart felt wrong.

By the turn of the year, being together felt necessary.

He did not yet ask himself what it would cost.

After that, their need for each other stopped being subtle.

They found reasons.

Wonwoo claimed he studied better with someone on call. Junhui said his Korean improved faster when he listened to Wonwoo read aloud. So they opened video calls at night, textbooks spread across separate desks, each doing their own work, neither speaking much. Sometimes they forgot the call was even on. Sometimes they stared at the small square of the other’s face longer than necessary, reassured by mere presence.

When Wonwoo’s eyes grew tired, Junhui reminded him to blink. When Junhui’s handwriting slowed, Wonwoo told him to rest his wrist.

They did not talk about missing each other.

They simply did.

During the short break before final exam preparations resumed, Wonwoo woke one morning with the weight of absence pressing against his ribs.

He did not overthink it. He called Junhui.

“Let’s go somewhere,” he said.

“Where?”

“I don’t know yet. Just… come.”

Two hours later, they were on a bus headed west, the city thinning behind them. The destination was Jebu-do, a small island town where the sea met concrete roads and rusted fishing boats leaned against low stone walls. It was not a place people posted about online. It was simply quiet.

They walked along the tidal flats, shoes in hand, trousers rolled up. The water was cold. Junhui laughed when a wave caught him off guard. Wonwoo watched the sound of it settle into his chest.

They climbed the narrow steps of a small lighthouse, paint peeling, railings worn smooth by wind. At the top, the sea stretched in all directions. No schedules. No teachers. No family tables. Only horizon.

For lunch, they wandered into a tiny place with plastic chairs and handwritten menus. Junhui scanned the options, then shook his head when the owner offered skewers.

“I don’t eat those,” he said.

“Why?”

Junhui looked faintly embarrassed. “I ate one once and got food poisoning. Got sick for two days. Now I can’t bring myself to eat them.”

Wonwoo smiled. “That’s reasonable.”

Junhui looked at him for a moment, then laughed. The sound carried easily in the small restaurant, and the owner smiled too, not understanding the words but understanding enough.

By evening, the tide had returned. The sky deepened into soft violet. Streetlights flickered on one by one. The last bus back to Seoul sat at the stop, engine idling.

They stood there without moving toward it.

Junhui hugged his jacket tighter around himself. Wonwoo watched the way his breath turned to mist.

He took Junhui’s hand.

“Want to stay the night?” he asked.

Junhui’s fingers tightened around his.

“Yes,” he said.

The room they found was small, with a thin mattress and a heater that rattled when it worked. The room smelled faintly of sea salt and the detergent used on the thin blanket folded at the foot of the mattress. Outside, waves broke against the shore, soft and endless, like breath.

Junhui sat cross-legged on the mattress, drying his hair with a small towel. His cheeks were pink from the cold. Wonwoo watched him from the plastic chair by the window, one hand resting on his knee, fingers tapping once every few seconds without his permission.

“You’re staring,” Junhui said, not looking up.

“I’m not,” Wonwoo replied.

Junhui lowered the towel and turned his head. His eyes curved slightly. “You are.”

Wonwoo did not bother denying it again. He stood instead, moved to the mattress, and sat beside Junhui. The space between them was small. Not touching. But close enough that warmth crossed.

Junhui’s hair was still damp at the ends. Wonwoo reached out, hesitated, then let his fingers brush lightly against the strands. Junhui leaned into the touch without thinking, eyes falling closed.

The movement loosened something in Wonwoo’s chest.

He slid his hand to the back of Junhui’s neck. The skin there was warm. Alive. Junhui’s breath shifted, slow and steady.

“Wonwoo,” Junhui said quietly.

“Yes.”

Junhui turned fully toward him. Their knees touched. Their hands rested between them, fingers brushing once, twice, before entwining. Junhui’s grip was firm, sure, as if he had already decided this moment earlier in the day.

Wonwoo leaned in first. Carefully. Like approaching a door he did not want to frighten shut.

Their foreheads met. Junhui tilted his chin up. Their lips brushed. Once. Then again. A little longer. Junhui’s free hand found the collar of Wonwoo’s shirt, holding him in place as if afraid he might disappear.

The kiss deepened. Not rushed. Not clumsy. Just earnest. Exploratory. Breathing mingling. Hearts beating too fast.

Wonwoo’s hand slid from Junhui’s neck to his back, drawing him closer. The towel fell forgotten to the side.

Junhui shifted onto his knees. Wonwoo followed. Their bodies aligned, knees pressed into the mattress, hands on shoulders, backs, waists. Each touch asked a question. Each answering touch said yes.

When Wonwoo eased Junhui down onto the mattress, it was slow. Giving time. Giving choice. Junhui’s fingers never left his wrist.

The blanket tangled around their legs. Clothes were loosened, pushed aside, dropped to the floor without urgency. Skin met skin. Warmth spread. Junhui’s breath caught once, then settled as Wonwoo kissed his forehead, his cheek, the corner of his mouth.

They moved together with hesitant certainty, learning the shape of each other in whispers and gasps and the soft creak of the mattress springs. Junhui hid his face against Wonwoo’s shoulder when feeling overwhelmed. Wonwoo held him tighter, as if anchoring him.

Outside, the sea continued. Inside, time folded inward.

Later, when the heater rattled again, Junhui lay curled against Wonwoo’s chest. Wonwoo’s arm circled his back. Their legs were tangled. Their breaths had slowed.

Junhui traced idle shapes on Wonwoo’s ribs with one finger.

“Stay,” he murmured.

Wonwoo pressed his lips to Junhui’s hair. “Hmm.”

 

The house was quiet in the late afternoon. Soft carpets absorbed footsteps. Heavy curtains filtered light into warm gold instead of harsh white. Even the air smelled curated, pine and citrus and something faintly floral that never lingered too long.

Wonwoo stepped inside, removed his shoes, and placed them parallel to the edge of the mat. His school bag rested against his hip. The weight of it felt ordinary. Everything else did not.

His mother was seated by the window, a porcelain teacup in her hand, steam threading upward in thin spirals. She looked up as he approached, her expression smooth and unreadable, as though nothing in this world could truly surprise her.

“You’re home earlier than expected,” she said.

“There was no extra class today,” Wonwoo replied.

She nodded and gestured to the seat across from her. He sat. The cushion yielded just enough to feel expensive, never soft enough to be indulgent.

She poured tea into another cup. The stream of liquid was steady. Precise. He accepted the cup with both hands. The porcelain was warm against his palms.

For a while, they sat in silence. Outside, the garden shifted in the breeze. Leaves brushed against one another, quiet and constant.

Then his mother spoke.

“Your little uncle visited yesterday.”

The words slid into the room without emphasis. Still, something inside Wonwoo tightened.

She continued, eyes on the tea surface as though reading reflections there. “He has started another course of treatment. The doctors say the tremors have eased. His appetite has returned somewhat.”

Wonwoo’s fingers curled around the cup. He did not sip.

He remembered the hospital room. The drawn blinds. The way his uncle’s hands shook even while resting on the blanket. How the man who once carried him on his shoulders had looked so small in that bed, breath uneven, skin pale, eyes hollowed by something deeper than illness.

He had overheard the adults talking about the bond removal surgery. The omega wife who left. The fever that followed. The screams that came at night when no visitors were present. The way the house received him back, not as a son or brother, but as a lesson.

His mother lifted her cup and drank.

“She was intelligent,” she said at last. “Ambitious. But she could not understand what it means to belong to a family that stands above individual desire. She wanted love to be enough.”

Her lips curved slightly. Not in mockery. In recognition of inevitability.

“When she left, she took her freedom. Your uncle kept the family. Each paid a price.”

Wonwoo stared at the tea. The surface had gone still. No steam now. His mother set the cup down gently.

“You will graduate soon,” she said. “Your life will begin to take shape in ways that cannot be undone.”

She did not look at him when she spoke the next words, as though allowing him the dignity of pretending this was not personal.

“Affection is natural at your age. But not every attachment is meant to be carried into adulthood.”

Wonwoo’s heartbeat slowed. Or perhaps he simply noticed it.

His mother finally lifted her gaze to him. 

“You are a Jeon,” she said. “One day, you will have people depending on you. Thousands of them. You must never place someone in a life they cannot endure.”

Her voice never rose. Yet the words settled in his chest with the weight of stone.

He thought of Junhui’s laughter on the beach. Junhui’s hands playing piano in a small practice room. Junhui leaning into him beneath a rattling heater, whispering stay.

He thought of that same Junhui sitting in this room. Under these eyes. At this table. Learning how to fold himself smaller, quieter, more careful, until the lightness in him dimmed into survival.

He saw his uncle’s shaking hands again.

He saw Junhui’s hands on ivory keys.

The images overlapped.

His mother reached for the teapot, refilling his cup though he had not touched it.

“You have always been sensible,” she said. “I trust you will remain so.”

The conversation ended because there was nothing left to say. His mother returned to her book. The house resumed its quiet.

Wonwoo bowed and left the room.

He walked down the corridor lined with framed photographs of weddings, inaugurations, ribbon cuttings, handshakes with politicians. A lineage arranged like evidence of inevitability.

In his bedroom, he closed the door and leaned against it.

His phone lay on the desk. No new messages. No missed calls.

He imagined texting Junhui. Reminiscing about their trip again. The sea. The small room they spent the night in. The way Junhui had fit against him like something meant to be held.

He imagined bringing Junhui here one day. Introducing him. Watching him stand uncertainly at the threshold, polite smile fixed in place, shoulders drawn tight. He imagined the slow years that would follow. Polite meals. Careful conversations. Invisible walls. The quiet erosion of something once free.

He imagined Junhui asking him, someday, to choose. And he already knew the answer. 

His chest tightened. He breathed in, then breathed out. Controlled. Measured.

He sat at his desk and opened his textbook. The words blurred. But he kept reading.

That night, when Junhui messaged him first, Wonwoo waited a long time before replying. It was not because he did not want to answer, but because he was learning how to let go without breaking anything too quickly.

 

Notes:

They were only eighteen when they learned how deeply they could belong to each other, and how little space the world was willing to give them to do so. What follows in the present is shaped by this quiet history: a boy who chose control because he believed it would spare the person he loved, and another who endured the consequences without ever knowing the full reason why.

Wonwoo’s decision was not born from a lack of love but from an inherited understanding of duty, consequence, and survival. Whether that choice protected Junhui or harmed him is a question time has not yet answered.

In the next chapter, we return to the present. Junhui has stepped back into Wonwoo’s life by coincidence alone. And Wonwoo has, in a rare moment of impulsiveness, admitted that Junhui is not a stranger.

Chapter 4: once noticed, never unnoticed

Summary:

A small admission slips into conversation and vanishes. The night continues. And Wonwoo discovers that once someone re-enters your world, the body remembers long before the mind agrees to.

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

“So,” Soonyoung says, leaning forward, eyes bright with curiosity that never bothers to hide itself. “You two know each other?”

The question lands lightly. Carelessly. Like a stone skipping across water.

Wonwoo hears the word leave his mouth before he measures it.

“Yeah.”

A single syllable. Calm. Unremarkable.

Except the air shifts. Only slightly. Only for a moment. But enough.

Soonyoung blinks. Mingyu pauses mid-bite. Jihoon lifts his gaze from his cup. Minghao’s eyes flick from Junhui to Wonwoo, then away again. Junhui looks up, expression smooth, polite, unreadable.

“Oh?” Soonyoung says. “From where?”

Wonwoo takes a sip of his drink. The liquid is lukewarm. He swallows.

“High school,” he says.

Junhui inclines his head, as if confirming a detail in a story someone else is telling.

“Our after-school clubs were in the same complex,” Junhui adds. His voice is soft, even, offered for the group’s understanding rather than Wonwoo’s.

“Ah,” Mingyu says. “Small world.”

Conversation flows back into other things. Assignments. Class registration. Who slept the least this week. The moment passes. Or pretends to.

But Wonwoo feels the weight of it settle behind his ribs. The word has been spoken. The past acknowledged. It’s out in the open where others can see it. Although only a tiny fraction of it.

He does not look at Junhui again that night. Looking would mean confirming what has just been admitted.

When they finally leave, the rain has thinned to a mist. The pavement glows under streetlights. Breath turns visible in the cool air.

Mingyu and Minghao head down the main road toward off-campus housing. Jihoon lifts his hood and waves once before disappearing into the subway entrance. Junhui follows Minghao without hesitation, hands tucked into his jacket sleeves, shoulders slightly hunched against the cold.

Wonwoo watches his back for only a second too long.

Then Soonyoung bumps his shoulder lightly.

“Dorm buddies,” he announces, as if nothing unusual has happened at all.

They start walking up the hill toward Yonsei’s back gate. The campus is quiet at this hour. Trees whisper overhead. Puddles reflect the lights in soft distortions.

Soonyoung walks with his hands in his pockets, humming something tuneless. He waits until they are far enough that no one else can hear.

Then, casually, “You and Junhui. You said earlier you knew him.”

Wonwoo keeps his gaze ahead. The incline of the hill demands steady breathing. It gives him something to do with his body.

“I told you earlier,” he says. “We met before.”

Soonyoung makes a small sound. 

“You don’t usually say ‘yeah’ like that about someone you only met before,” Soonyoung replies. His tone stays light, but his eyes are attentive now. Watching Wonwoo’s profile. The slight tightening at his jaw.

Wonwoo exhales. The air fogs briefly in front of him.

“I used to have basketball practice in the same complex where he had piano lessons.”

It is true. It is safe. It has to be enough.

Soonyoung looks at him for a long moment. Then he nods.

“Got it,” he says simply.

He doesn’t press or tease. No demand for more. Wonwoo knows its Soonyoung’s way of  accepting the boundary. And that’s one of the reasons why Soonyoung is one of his few close friends. Soonyoung may be overenthusiastic most of the times, but he is also perceptive. He knows Wonwoo does not take kindly to being pushed and accepts that there are things that Wonwoo does not share. They never talk about Wonwoo’s family. Now another thing has just been added to the list. 

They walk in silence for a while. Their shoes make dull sounds against the wet pavement. A bus passes at the bottom of the hill, lights cutting through the mist.

Finally, Soonyoung nudges his shoulder again.

“If you ever need emergency midnight ramyeon therapy,” he says, “you know where my room is.”

Wonwoo’s lips lift almost imperceptibly.

“I know,” he says.

They enter the dorm building. Warm air wraps around them. The familiar smell of detergent, instant noodles, and too many people living too close.

Soonyoung heads for the stairs, still humming. Wonwoo stands for a moment longer in the lobby, hands in his pockets, listening to the rain outside.

He has said it aloud.

They know each other.

The past is no longer only his to carry. 

Wonwoo does not linger long in the lobby.

He crosses the polished floor, nods to the student worker at the desk, and heads up the stairs. His footsteps are measured, quiet, as if noise itself might draw attention to what he is thinking. The dorm hallway smells of detergent and instant noodles and too many people living too close together.

His room is at the end of the corridor.

Inside, the lights are off. His roommate has not returned yet. Wonwoo switches on the desk lamp only, leaving the rest of the room in shadow. He sets his bag down, hangs his jacket, folds his umbrella neatly in the corner. Every movement is practiced, precise, a routine built to keep everything in its place.

He sits at his desk.

The textbook opens in front of him. The page is dense with text. He reads the first sentence. Then the second. Then realizes he does not remember either.

He closes the book.

The laptop hums softly as it wakes. The student portal loads. He types Junhui’s name into the search bar without hesitation, as though the thought has been waiting in his fingers all along.

A profile appears.

Wen Junhui. Department of Korean Language. First year, second semester.

Wonwoo’s eyes stay on the screen.

He already knows Junhui is a freshman. Soonyoung introduced him that way. But seeing it in institutional print removes any room for mishearing. It is official. Recorded. Unarguable.

He leans back slightly in his chair.

Junhui is the same age as him.

They entered high school the same year. They prepared for exams side by side. Junhui would not have to serve in the military since he is non-Korean. By every expected path, Junhui should be in his third year now. At the very least, second.

But he is here. A freshman.

Wonwoo does not speculate yet. He only notes the fact, precise and sharp, like a line drawn in ink.

Why only now?

He closes the tab. Shuts the laptop. Returns the textbook to its exact original position, as if restoring order will restore distance. He lies back on his bed, hands folded over his stomach, eyes on the ceiling.

Rain continues outside, soft and steady against the window.

He tells himself there is nothing unusual about delayed enrollment. People change plans. People take time. People start over.

He repeats this until the words lose their edges.

Eventually his roommate returns, loud and cheerful, complaining about a late assignment and cold fingers. Wonwoo responds at the right moments, nods when expected, offers short answers. His body performs familiarity while his mind remains elsewhere.

Later, when the lights are off and the room is dark again, Wonwoo listens to his roommate’s breathing settle into sleep.

Only then does his mind return to the convenience store.

Junhui’s Korean is smoother now. The careful pauses that once shaped each sentence are gone. The slight accent that used to cling to certain consonants has thinned, almost dissolved, noticeable only to someone who once corrected his notebook line by line. His speech flows easily. Polite endings chosen without effort. Tone soft, respectful, perfectly placed for someone younger in the group.

Except he is not younger.

Wonwoo remembers this with a small, precise ache.

Junhui speaks freely with the others. He leans toward Minghao when they share a comment in Chinese, shoulders loosening in a way they never quite did years ago. He listens to Jihoon’s talk about composition with open attention, nodding at the right moments. When Mingyu pushes a skewer toward him, he accepts it without hesitation, bites cleanly, chews quickly, efficiently, as though meals are tasks to complete rather than moments to linger in. When the group laughs, he laughs too, soft and genuine, but the sound never overruns the room. It arrives and leaves exactly when it should.

And when he turns toward Wonwoo, it is only when the conversation requires it. A brief glance. A polite reply. A neutral smile. Nothing more. Nothing that suggests familiarity. 

Even his posture feels different. Sleeves remain pulled down despite the warmth of the heater. His hands rest neatly on the table or fold in his lap. No restless fingers. No idle tapping. 

There is nothing outwardly wrong. Which is what unsettles Wonwoo most.

Because he remembers another Junhui. One who filled silences with questions. One who leaned closer without thinking. One who let music spill out where words failed. This Junhui does not need translation. He does not need guidance, and does not need anyone to stay beside him.

Wonwoo tells himself this is good. He tells himself this is exactly what he wanted. But the thought sits poorly in his chest, like a stone that does not quite fit.

He turns onto his side, staring at the faint outline of the curtain against the window.

He is only noticing, he tells himself.

Only noticing.

Yet noticing has never been neutral for him.

And sleep comes slowly, careful and thin, like everything else he refuses to name.

Days fall into pattern.

Wonwoo attends lectures, takes notes, answers when called upon. He eats with the group when schedules allow. He trains at the gym, showers, returns to the dorm, studies until the numbers on the clock blur. From the outside, nothing has changed. He is still the same quiet, reliable presence moving efficiently through each obligation.

Except now, Junhui exists in the same space.

And once Wonwoo is aware of something, he cannot become unaware again.

He sees Junhui in the library. It’s not that Junhui stands out, but Wonwoo’s eyes find him without conscious intention. A corner table near the windows. Laptop open. Notebook beside it. Junhui sits upright, shoulders relaxed, fingers moving in quick, practiced strokes as he types. Occasionally he pauses, glances at the screen, murmurs a sentence under his breath. The sight settles strangely in Wonwoo’s chest.

He should walk past. He does walk past. But slower than necessary, just long enough to notice the way Junhui’s hair has grown, the way the light falls on his cheek, the way his bag rests on the chair instead of the floor. 

Junhui never looks up.

By the time Wonwoo exits the library, he is already telling himself that noticing is not the same thing as longing.

In the lecture hall once a week, they share the same space again. Junhui sits two rows ahead, slightly to the left, always in the same seat. He arrives early, opens his laptop, waits without restlessness. When the professor begins speaking, Junhui’s fingers move quickly over the keyboard. He does not fidget and does not slouch. He does not drift. Every movement is purposeful, like his body has been trained into efficiency.

Wonwoo finds his gaze lifting toward him more often than he intends. He notices the way Junhui tucks his hair behind his ear when it falls forward. His sleeve always sits a little too low, even when the room is warm. He drinks water in small measured sips, never gulping, never spilling. There is something disciplined in it, something that did not exist before.

When class ends, Junhui packs his things quickly and disappears into the crowd without hesitation. Wonwoo lingers in his seat a moment longer, letting the room empty before he stands, as if delay might restore balance.

On campus paths, he passes Junhui in motion. Near the student union, Minghao says something in Chinese that makes Junhui’s shoulders loosen, laughter breaking softly from him. Outside the cafeteria, Junhui waits alone in line, phone in hand, face calm, patient. Wonwoo notices him crossing the quad, earphones in, gaze forward, steps even. He belongs here. Easily. Quietly. 

And in group gatherings, Junhui fits as though he has always been there. He listens more than he speaks, but when he does speak, his words land neatly. He laughs when Mingyu exaggerates a story, then lets the sound fade without clinging to it. He speaks to Soonyoung and Jihoon with polite endings, respectful distance. To Minghao, something warmer. To Wonwoo, only what is necessary. A glance. A reply. A nod. Nothing that reaches across the space between them.

Wonwoo notices all of it.

Once, in a crowded hallway, someone bumps Junhui’s shoulder hard enough that a notebook nearly slips from his grip. For a fraction of a second, Junhui’s body stiffens. Not flinching. Not startled. Just a tightening, a brief stillness, then release. He adjusts his grip and continues walking as if nothing happened.

Wonwoo sees it.

No one else does.

Another time, at a shared study table in the library, Junhui lifts his arm to tie his hair back. Fabric slides up, just for a breath of a moment. Wonwoo notices the ink on Junhui’s skin. A string of umbers on the inner curve of his left wrist. Then the sleeve falls back into place, and Junhui continues speaking to Minghao about an assignment as if no one saw.

Wonwoo says nothing.

But his fingers curl slowly around his pen until the plastic bends.

He tells himself that he is only noticing because Junhui exists in the same environment now, because their paths once crossed, because coincidence has a way of folding past and present into the same narrow corridor. Nothing more. Nothing worth naming.

But each day, his attention drifts toward Junhui before he can stop it. Not because Junhui demands it. Junhui never even reaches for him. It’s simply because presence has weight, and Junhui’s presence has settled into his world with quiet inevitability. Once something enters Wonwoo’s awareness, it does not fade on its own. It remains. It accumulates detail. It sharpens.

He does not approach. He does not ask. He does not bridge the space between them. Distance is still the rule he built his life around, and he holds to it with the same discipline that once felt like safety.

So he watches instead. From across rooms, across tables, across walkways crowded with passing bodies. He listens to tones, registers pauses, tracks movements too small for anyone else to care about. Each detail settles into place inside him. And each piece of observation brings a question with it. Why the delayed enrollment. Why the sleeves pulled down. Why the laughter that arrives and leaves on cue. 

The questions build quietly, layer by layer, observation by observation, until Wonwoo’s inner world is crowded with them. He does not allow them to reach his face. He does not let them shape his actions. But they exist now, multiplying in the spaces he once kept empty.

And once questions take root in Wonwoo’s mind, they do not disappear on their own.

Wonwoo never takes his friends for granted.

He does not say this aloud. He does not show it easily. But he knows what it means to have a group that gathers without agenda, that fills shared tables and dorm rooms and late-night study sessions with noise and presence. He knows how rare it is to be accepted without performance. He knows that walking away from them now, simply because Junhui has re-entered his life, would be a kind of cowardice.

So he does not distance himself.

Their outings are semi-regular. Nothing formal. A text in the group chat. A time. A place near campus. Whoever is free shows up. Whoever is tired stays home. It is casual in the way only friendships that feel secure can be.

Tonight, it is a narrow restaurant wedged between a stationery shop and a fried chicken joint. Warm air carries the smell of broth and grilled meat. Metal chopsticks strike ceramic. Chairs scrape tile. Mingyu chose the place, proudly declaring it cheap, filling, and impossible to ruin.

They push two tables together.

Minghao and Junhui sit side by side, heads bent over the menu. Jihoon squints at unfamiliar dishes. Soonyoung insists they order enough for everyone. Mingyu waves down the server. 

Conversation unfolds in overlapping threads.

“This place better be good,” Mingyu says, already chewing.

“If it’s bad, you chose it,” Jihoon replies.

Soonyoung laughs and turns to Junhui. “Second semester treating you alright?”

Junhui nods. “It’s good. Professors are kind. Assignments are manageable.” His tone is light, faintly amused.

Wonwoo sits at the end, jacket folded beside him, gaze drifting without urgency.

He watches Junhui.

When the food arrives, Junhui thanks the server in polite Korean. His pronunciation is clean, natural. He eats neatly, efficiently, lifting rice in careful portions, sipping soup without noise, cutting meat into precise bites. Not rushed. Not hesitant. Practiced.

Wonwoo remembers another version of this.

A boy hunched over a plastic table in a convenience store, poking uncertainly at unfamiliar food. A soft laugh when spice hit too hard. Ice cream melting faster than Junhui could eat it because he kept stopping to talk.

This Junhui does not hesitate. Does not ask. Does not wait. He simply eats the food served in front of him.

Minghao says something in Chinese to Junhui. Junhui answers in quick and fluid Chinese, shoulders loosening as they share the exchange. Then he turns back to the group, slipping into Korean again without pause.

At some point Mingyu leans back, eyes flicking toward Wonwoo.

“You’re too quiet. Thinking about stocks again?”

Soonyoung snorts. “Please. Jeon Wonwoo doesn’t think about stocks. Stocks think about him.”

Jihoon adds, dry as ever, “I heard his family owns half the city.”

Minghao hums. “Only half?”

They laugh. Even Junhui smiles, small and genuine, eyes flicking briefly toward Wonwoo before returning to his food.

Wonwoo exhales softly. He never confirms or denies it. The joke is familiar. Comfortable. His family remains an outline at the edge of conversation, acknowledged but untouched.

The plates empty. The noise settles.

Jihoon starts talking about a composition project. “Piano and strings. I’m stuck on the transition. It sounds like regret.”

“Everything you write sounds like regret,” Mingyu says.

“That’s because I’m an artist,” Jihoon replies.

Soonyoung groans. “Anyway—does anyone here actually play instruments, or is Jihoon the only tortured soul?”

Minghao shrugs. “I played Guqin. A little. When I was younger.”

Jihoon turns to Junhui. “What about you?”

Junhui pauses, chopsticks hovering for half a beat. Then he sets them down neatly.

“I used to play piano,” he says.

Jihoon’s eyes brighten. “Classical?”

Junhui nods. “Mostly.”

“So why ‘used to’?” Soonyoung asks, leaning forward in gentle curiosity. “You should come jam with Jihoon sometime.”

Junhui smiles. Polite. Easy.

“Other things took up my time,” he says. “I don’t play anymore.”

No hesitation. No weight in his tone. Just a statement.

The table moves on. Mingyu complains about having no talent. Soonyoung declares everyone here secretly impressive. Jihoon returns to chord progressions. Minghao tells Junhui about a Chinese restaurant near campus.

Only Wonwoo remains still inside himself.

He watches Junhui lift his cup, drink in measured sips, sleeve covering the inside of his wrist. He watches how Junhui answers smoothly, laughs lightly, never once looking toward him unless spoken to directly.

He hears the sentence again.

Other things took up my time.

And in his mind, it does not remain a sentence. It becomes a fracture line. Every detail he has gathered shifts, aligns, sharpens. The delayed enrollment. The disciplined posture. The absence of music. The tattooed numbers on the inside of his wrist.

Each observation now points toward a possibility he has never allowed himself to consider.

The pieces do not yet form a picture, but refuse to sit neatly apart.

For four years, Wonwoo has carried a quiet understanding of how things were meant to unfold. High school ends. People drift. First loves hurt for a while, then soften at the edges, then become stories told with a small smile. He has believed that their parting, though difficult, had been gentle enough to allow both of them to walk away intact. He has believed that Junhui, who once laughed so easily and adapted so quickly, would have moved on, met new people, found new rhythms to fill the silence they left behind.

That belief has been steady. Reliable. Logical.

Now, small inconsistencies begin to press against it. Something has caused Junhui to stop playing the piano.

Wonwoo remembers how the piano once anchored Junhui’s entire world. The way his fingers moved before his thoughts did, as though sound was the first language he ever learned. The way he sat at the bench, playing not to improve but simply to exist inside something that felt safe. The way he filled the practice room with melodies that sounded like quiet confession, like longing shaped into something bearable. Piano was never just a hobby for Junhui. It was where he placed feelings too large for speech, where he returned when homesickness tightened his chest, where he steadied himself when everything else felt unfamiliar. People do not simply walk away from something that once held them together.

He keeps his expression unchanged. Keeps his posture relaxed. Keeps his voice steady when he speaks again.

But inside, a new question takes shape among the others, quiet but distinct.

What happened to Junhui after they parted?

The question does not push him toward action. Only toward awareness. Because wanting to know and having the right to ask are different things. They are no longer what they once were. Whatever closeness existed between them has been folded away, sealed under years of silence and polite distance. To ask now would be to admit that he has been watching. That he has noticed. That he has not, in fact, let the past remain where it belongs.

And even if he asked, would Junhui answer? Would he offer truth to someone who left his life by choice, no matter how gentle the departure had seemed at the time?

Wonwoo understands the simplest solution.

If he wishes to maintain distance, then the correct move is not to ask.

So he does nothing.

And lets the question remain where it is, alive and unanswered, eating its way through the careful order of his mind.

Notes:

In this chapter, nothing dramatic happens on the surface. A question is asked. A truth is acknowledged. Life continues. But for Wonwoo, this is the point where the past stops being sealed memory and becomes present reality again.

His instinct has always been distance. Control. Non-interference. He believed leaving Junhui was an act of protection, and over the years he built a life structured around not looking back. So when Junhui reappears, Wonwoo’s first response is not longing, but observation. He watches because watching feels safer than touching. He notices because noticing does not yet demand action.

But noticing is never neutral for him. Each detail he gathers becomes evidence. Each change in Junhui’s demeanour becomes a question. And each unanswered question quietly erodes the belief that the past resolved itself on its own.

Wonwoo does not yet think in terms of guilt or responsibility. He is still operating under the assumption that first loves fade, that people adapt, that pain from separation heals by default. This chapter is where that assumption begins to crack, just enough to let uncertainty in.

He does not ask or reach out. He does not cross the distance.

But he is no longer unaware.

Chapter 5: the heart remembers what the brain pretends to forget

Summary:

Diagnosis: an unfinished bond. Prognosis: impossible to outrun.

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

The air outside the restaurant feels heavy with heat, especially since they just stepped out of an airconned space. 

Their breath shows briefly, pale and thin, before the streetlights swallow it. The group spills onto the sidewalk in the familiar untidy way of people who have eaten well and have nowhere urgent to be. Mingyu complains about the price even though he chose the place. Soonyoung talks over him, already planning next week’s outing, voice bright enough to make the night feel less sharp. Jihoon walks slightly apart, hands in his coat pockets, gaze angled downward as if he is still hearing music that no one else can.

Junhui stays close to Minghao.

Wonwoo stays where he always stays, a half-step out of the center, present without taking up space. He laughs at the right moments. He answers when addressed. He keeps his hands his pockets and his expression calm.

Inside, the question does not leave him.

Junhui used to play piano. Not anymore.

It is a simple fact, offered without ceremony, but it follows Wonwoo out of the restaurant like a shadow. He listens to the group talk around it as if the world hasn’t changed, as if the sentence hasn’t opened a door that should have remained closed.

When they reach the intersection, Soonyoung stretches his arms overhead and groans.

“I’m going to sleep for eighteen hours,” he declares. “I only have afternoon class tomorrow and I deserve it.”

“You never deserve it,” Mingyu says.

“I deserve everything,” Soonyoung replies, grinning. “Junhui, you’re coming next time too, right?”

Junhui smiles. “If I’m free.”

“You’ll be free,” Soonyoung says, as if willpower can rearrange schedules. He looks pleased with himself for having said it, and for a moment Junhui’s expression softens into something almost fond.

They split at the crosswalk. Mingyu heads toward the station. Jihoon peels away in the opposite direction with a brief nod. Minghao walks with Junhui, talking in low, quick Chinese that Wonwoo cannot fully catch from behind. Soonyoung and Wonwoo remain together, because they always do, because their dorm building waits in the same direction.

Wonwoo does not turn his head.

He feels Junhui’s presence receding anyway, as clearly as if someone has lowered the volume on the world.

Soonyoung bumps his shoulder lightly with his own.

“You okay?” he asks.

“I’m fine,” Wonwoo says.

Soonyoung makes a sound of disbelief, but he doesn’t press. He talks about a class presentation instead, complains about a professor’s harsh grading, laughs at his own story. Wonwoo lets the words wash over him. He nods in the right places.

When they reach the dorm entrance, Wonwoo holds the door without thinking. Soonyoung bounds ahead, still talking, and Wonwoo follows.

He is halfway through taking off his shoes when his phone vibrates.

A message in the group chat.

Minghao: Junhui’s not feeling well. I’m bringing him back.

A second message arrives almost immediately.

Minghao: He says he’s fine. But he’s not looking good.

Wonwoo’s hand stills against the lace of his shoe.

Soonyoung, already halfway toward the elevator, looks back at him. “What?”

Wonwoo’s throat tightens in a way that feels irrational. His mind supplies a calm explanation before his body can react: late night, heavy food, fatigue. The simplest answer is usually correct.

Yet his attention sharpens, the way it always does when something threatens to fall out of place.

“He’s not feeling well,” Wonwoo says.

Soonyoung steps back toward him, face rearranging into concern as he checks his phone. “Junhui? Is he sick?”

“I don’t know.” Wonwoo’s voice stays even. It takes effort.

Soonyoung is already tapping on his phone screen. “I’ll call Minghao.”

Wonwoo watches him do it. Watches the way Soonyoung’s expression shifts as he listens. Watches his eyebrows lift.

“What do you mean he can’t breathe?” Soonyoung says, suddenly quieter. “No, not like asthma, like… what? He’s sweating? He’s dizzy?”

Wonwoo’s fingers curl slowly into his palm.

Soonyoung glances at him, eyes wide now. “Minghao says Junhui’s pheromone blocker might be failing.”

Wonwoo does not move.

The words hang in the air, clinical and blunt. Blocker failing. As if Junhui is a device, as if bodies are machines. Wonwoo’s mind reaches for explanation. Blockers fail. Omegas have cycles. That is normal.

His body, however, reacts first.

Heat rises under his skin. Something closer to panic, to a protective surge that has no place in him and no permission to exist.

He takes one step, then another, before deciding to.

“Where are they?” he asks.

Soonyoung answers without hesitation. “Freshman dorm side. Minghao’s trying to get him upstairs.”

Wonwoo is already moving.

He leaves his shoes where they are. He doesn’t register the cold floor under his socks. He hears Soonyoung scrambling after him, calling his name, but he doesn’t slow. His world narrows into direction and distance.

Freshman dorm side. Freshman dorm side.

The night air cuts across his face when he pushes outside. He walks fast, then faster, breath sharp in his chest. Something in him strains toward a point he cannot yet see.

When he reaches the freshman building, he spots them immediately.

Minghao stands near the entrance, one hand gripping Junhui’s elbow. Junhui’s head is angled down, hair falling forward to hide his eyes. His shoulders rise and fall too quickly, breaths uneven. Even from several meters away, Wonwoo sees the sheen of sweat at his temple. The careful containment is gone. Something has broken through.

Minghao looks up and sees him.

Relief flashes across his face, quick and raw. “Wonwoo.”

Junhui lifts his head at the sound of the name. His gaze lands on Wonwoo as if pulled there by force. For a second his eyes are unfocused, glassy with strain. Then something sharp crosses his expression, not recognition exactly, but alarm.

“No,” Junhui says, voice thin. “It’s okay. I’m okay.”

Minghao tightens his grip. “You’re not okay.”

Junhui swallows hard. His sleeve is still pulled down, but his fingers tremble slightly where they curl around the strap of his bag. His breathing stutters again, and he squeezes his eyes shut as if trying to push sensation back into order.

Wonwoo stops in front of them.

He should ask what happened. He should keep his voice low and neutral. He should not touch. But his body has already made a decision his mind is still catching up to.

Junhui’s scent leaks through the air in faint, uneven waves. It is muffled by blockers, broken by suppressants, but underneath it there is something unmistakable. A familiar note that his body recognises the way it recognises his own heartbeat.

Wonwoo’s vision sharpens. It feels like a threat response, a pull of instinct so strong it borders on violence.

Junhui flinches as if he can sense it, as if the air has tightened between them. His eyes dart away, searching for distance.

Wonwoo does not move closer. He locks his hands together in front of him to keep them still.

“Junhui,” Minghao says, gentle but firm. “We need to get you help.”

“I took my suppressant,” Junhui murmurs. “I did. It’s… it’s just early. It happens.”

Soonyoung arrives breathless, eyes flicking over Junhui’s face. “What happened? How are you feeling?” 

Junhui’s jaw tightens. He tries to straighten. The motion costs him. His breath catches, and for a moment the composure cracks into something painfully human.

Wonwoo watches it happen and feels something inside him shift again, the same quiet irreversible movement he has been resisting for days.

Junhui’s body is in distress.

And Wonwoo is here.

His mind offers the solution that has always been his refuge: distance. Step back. Don’t interfere. Let Minghao handle it. Let Soonyoung handle it. Let someone else—

But Junhui’s gaze flicks toward him again, involuntarily, and his breathing falters.

The air seems to tilt.

Jihoon appears at the entrance as if summoned by the tension itself, coat half-buttoned, hair slightly messy as though he came straight from his room. His eyes take in the scene in a single sweep. He does not ask questions. He moves. And Wonwoo distantly recalls that Jihoon is the only omega in their friend group, before Junhui, that is.

“Okay,” Jihoon says, voice calm. “Junhui, look at me.”

Junhui’s eyes find him, grateful in a way that is almost invisible.

Jihoon steps closer, keeping a respectful distance, positioning himself between Junhui and Wonwoo without making a show of it. “Can you walk?” he asks.

Junhui nods once, too quickly. “Yes.”

Jihoon watches his breathing, the tremor in his hands. “Not alone,” he says. “Minghao, support him. Soonyoung, call campus health. If they’re closed, call an ambulance. This doesn’t look like a normal heat onset.”

Soonyoung’s mouth opens, then closes. He nods and fumbles for his phone.

Wonwoo remains still, every muscle coiled.

Jihoon’s gaze flicks toward him briefly in assessment. “Wonwoo,” he says, voice low enough that only he can hear, “you need to step back if you can’t control your response. You’re making it harder.”

Wonwoo’s throat tightens.

“I’m not doing anything,” he says.

Jihoon’s eyes hold his. “Your body is.”

The words land like a slap, quiet and precise.

Junhui swallows and presses his lips together. His posture says he is trying to remain dignified, trying to remain unremarkable, trying not to become a scene.

Then his knees buckle slightly.

Minghao catches him.

That is enough.

Soonyoung is already on the phone, voice shaking. “Yes, it’s an omega in distress, blockers failing, he’s dizzy and sweating, yes, yes, we’re at the freshman dorm entrance—”

Jihoon nods once, as if he has done this before. He turns to Wonwoo again, voice controlled. “You’re going to help get him to the hospital,” he says. “Because Minghao and Soonyoung are betas and can’t help him if he needs pheromone stabilising, and Junhui will pretend he’s fine, and you—” his eyes narrow slightly “—you will do what you’re told if it keeps him safe.”

Wonwoo’s jaw tightens.

Junhui’s gaze flashes to him, sharp with refusal. “No,” Junhui says again. “I can go with Minghao.”

Minghao looks helplessly between them.

Jihoon does not soften. “Junhui,” he says, “you can argue later. Right now you need medical help.”

Junhui’s lips part, then close. He swallows, eyes briefly shuttering as another wave of discomfort passes through him.

Wonwoo hears himself speak before he chooses the words. “I’ll take him,” he says.

Junhui’s head snaps up.

Wonwoo keeps his voice even, factual. “Campus health will send you to the hospital anyway. It’s faster if we go now.”

Junhui stares at him as if trying to decide whether this is cruelty or practicality.

The ambulance arrives before Junhui can decide.

Lights wash the building in intermittent blue. The medics move with brisk efficiency, asking questions in practiced tones. Jihoon answers first, concise, clear. Minghao supplies details. Soonyoung hovers too close, hands fluttering uselessly.

Wonwoo stays slightly back until a medic looks at him.

“Are you his mate?” the medic asks, blunt in the way professionals become when time matters.

“No,” Wonwoo says.

The medic’s gaze sharpens. “Then why are you responding like one?”

Wonwoo does not answer.

His body has betrayed him already. There is no clean explanation.

Junhui is guided onto the stretcher. His eyes are half-lidded now, breath uneven, face pale. He looks angry at himself more than anyone else.

“Junhui,” Jihoon says softly, leaning close enough to be heard. “It’s okay. Let them help.”

Junhui’s fingers curl into the blanket. “I don’t want this,” he whispers.

Jihoon’s expression does not change, but his eyes soften. “You’ll be fine.”

The stretcher is wheeled toward the ambulance. Wonwoo follows without being asked.

A medic stops him with a hand to the chest. “Family only.”

“I’m—” Wonwoo starts.

Jihoon steps in smoothly. “He’s the closest available alpha,” he says, a calculated half-truth that makes the medic’s eyes narrow but does not give them time to argue. “And Junhui’s scent response is fixating. If you separate them abruptly, it can worsen distress.”

Junhui’s eyes flick toward Wonwoo again, unfocused but searching. His breathing spikes.

The medic exhales sharply. “Fine. Get in. But you sit back. You don’t touch him unless instructed.”

Wonwoo nods once.

The doors close.

The ambulance hums to life, and the world becomes fluorescent light, sterile smell, and the sound of Junhui’s breathing struggling to become even again.

Wonwoo sits on the bench seat, hands clasped tightly between his knees. His entire body thrums with a need to move closer that feels humiliating in its strength. He stares at the floor, as if eye contact would be a surrender.

Junhui lies on the stretcher, eyes shut, brow furrowed. The medic adjusts monitors, checks vitals, asks questions in a calm voice.

“What suppressants are you on?”

Junhui answers faintly.

“When was your last cycle?”

Junhui hesitates, then gives a date.

The medic’s gaze flicks briefly to Wonwoo again. “And you’re not his mate,” he repeats, as if refusing to accept the inconsistency.

“No,” Wonwoo says again, voice flat.

The medic makes a note anyway, the pen scratching against the clipboard.

Wonwoo’s palms sweat. His heartbeat is too loud in his ears. He feels ridiculous, out of control, as if his body has been hijacked by something older than reason.

When they reach the hospital, everything becomes faster.

Doors. Hallways. Curtains. Junhui’s name spoken by strangers. “Omega distress.” “Blocker failure.” “Elevated stress response.”

Wonwoo is told to sit.

He does not sit until Jihoon arrives, breathless, coat thrown over his shoulders. Minghao and Soonyoung trail behind him, eyes wide, faces tight with worry. 

Jihoon’s presence steadies the room. He speaks to the nurse with quiet authority. He asks what unit Junhui is being taken to. Wonwoo watches him and feels an unexpected flare of gratitude that has nowhere to go.

A few beats later Mingyu arrives, half panting as he approaches. He shares a look with Minghao, checking and confirming he is alright. He turns to Wonwoo. “What happened to Junhui?” he asks, voice low. “He was fine at dinner.”

Wonwoo keeps his gaze forward. “I don’t know,” he says.

It is true. It is also insufficient.

Junhui is taken behind a curtain.

The waiting area smells of antiseptic and instant coffee. The chairs are hard. The lighting is too bright. Time stretches, elastic and cruel.

Wonwoo’s body does not settle.

He remains tense, hyperalert, as if he expects to be called into action at any moment. He listens for footsteps. For voices. For Junhui’s name. His hands shake slightly when he loosens them from his clasp.

Jihoon watches him, expression unreadable. “You’re reacting,” he says quietly.

Wonwoo’s jaw tightens. “Stop.”

Jihoon tilts his head. “You’re not his mate,” he says, repeating the line as if testing it against reality. “And yet you’re reacting like one.”

Wonwoo says nothing.

Soonyoung shifts uneasily. “Okay,” he says, attempting levity and failing. “This is… new.”

Minghao’s gaze flicks between them, sharp with unease.

A doctor appears.
She is calm, mid-thirties, hair neatly tied back, expression professional. Her eyes take in the group, settle briefly on Wonwoo.

“Wen Junhui?” she asks.

Minghao stands immediately. “Yes.”

“He’s stable for now,” the doctor says. “We’ve managed the acute distress. He’ll need monitoring for the next few hours.”

Soonyoung exhales shakily.

The doctor’s gaze returns to Wonwoo. “And you’re the alpha who came in with him in the ambulance?”

Wonwoo nods and stands.

“Are you his partner?” she asks.

“No,” Wonwoo says.

The doctor studies him for a beat longer. “We observed a strong protective response from you during intake,” she says, voice still neutral. “Alphas can react to omega distress even without a formal bond. But your response was unusually pronounced.”

Wonwoo does not react outwardly. Inside, shame burns hot and sharp.

“I need accurate background,” the doctor continues. “Any registered partnership? Mating bite? Bond certification?”

“No registered partnership. No mating bite.”

“History?” she asks.

Wonwoo glances toward the curtain behind which Junhui lies. Junhui is not here to consent to this. Junhui would not want strangers hearing their past. Yet Junhui is in a hospital bed because his body has stopped coping.

Wonwoo chooses the least emotional version of the truth.

“We dated,” he says. “Years ago. As teenagers.”

“How long?”

“Six months officially. About two years of close contact.”

“Did you separate and met again after a period of time, probably years?”

“Yes.”

The doctor goes still for a moment, calculating. Then she nods once, as if a pattern has snapped into place.

“It’s possible he carries an incomplete bond imprint,” she says. “Especially if attachment formed during developmental years.”

Soonyoung frowns. Minghao leans forward slightly.

“What does that mean?” Minghao asks.

The doctor folds her hands. “A partial bond imprint can remain biologically active even without a formal bond. The body recognises a specific counterpart. Normally, pheromone regulation and conscious awareness keep responses within manageable range.”

Her eyes return to Wonwoo.

“But your friend has been on long-term pheromone blockers,” she continues. “Those suppress not only scent exchange but internal awareness of physiological response. If he re-entered sustained proximity with the imprint target, his body would still react. He just wouldn’t feel or recognise the changes.”

“So his body…” Soonyoung’s voice wavers. “Has been reacting this whole time?”

“Yes,” the doctor says. “Gradually. Quietly and without conscious feedback. Stress accumulates when a system is responding without behavioral adjustment. Eventually the blockers can no longer compensate.”

“And then?” Minghao asks, though his expression already knows.

“And then the body forces recognition,” the doctor says. “Acute distress. Autonomic overload. Sudden bond and pheromone awareness. What you witnessed today was not a new reaction. It was the collapse of prolonged suppression.”

Silence settles.

Wonwoo’s stomach drops, slow and heavy.

“We’d like to run an assessment,” the doctor says. “We’ll check for hormonal markers, scent receptor imprinting, and neural response signatures. It will help us determine risk and appropriate management.”

Wonwoo hears Soonyoung and Mingyu draw in a breath.

Minghao looks tense, uncertain.

Jihoon’s gaze remains steady.

Wonwoo’s instinct is to refuse. Not because he fears the test, but because he fears what it will imply, what it will drag into the open.

Jihoon speaks before he can. “Do it,” he says, quiet but firm.

Wonwoo looks at him.

Jihoon’s expression does not soften. “If it helps him,” he says simply.

Wonwoo nods once.

The nurse leads Wonwoo down a short corridor painted in a soft, institutional blue. The door closes behind them with a sound too final for something that is meant to be routine.

The room is small. One examination bed. A rolling tray of sealed instruments. A monitor with a quiet electrical hum. The overhead light is bright enough to erase shadows.

Another doctor introduces herself, confirms his name, confirms consent, explains the procedure again in careful, even Korean. Her voice is steady. Professional. Used to people who do not know what they are agreeing to.

Wonwoo listens without interrupting.

He does not tell her that agreeing is not the difficult part. Not when Junhui is lying behind a curtain down the hall, breathing unevenly because of something that has already happened.

He sits in the chair she indicates. The vinyl is cold through his trousers.

“First, a blood draw,” she says.

The tourniquet tightens around his arm. The needle slips in. A vial fills dark and slow. He watches the line of his blood without flinching, noting the slight tremor in his own fingers with detached curiosity. He is not afraid of needles. He is irritated by the loss of control.

Next, a swab inside his mouth. Quick. Efficient.

Then the monitor.

A thin adhesive pad is pressed just below his collarbone. Another at the base of his neck. A third along his wrist. The machine lights up, numbers scrolling in green.

“This will measure autonomic response to controlled scent exposure,” the doctor explains. “You may feel discomfort. If it becomes too strong, say so.”

Wonwoo nods.

A small vial is opened. Barely a drop is released into the air.

Junhui’s scent, diluted and filtered through medical standardisation, reaches him.

It is softer than memory but unmistakable. Clean skin after rain. Warm rice steam rising from a bowl held too close to the chest. A trace of citrus that never quite sharpens, only lingers. Something quietly sweet underneath, like breath against the inside of a wrist. 

His body reacts before his mind finishes recognising it. A tightening in his chest. A sharp awareness behind his eyes. A pulse that seems to move through his spine rather than his veins. Heat beneath his skin. A need—directionless but insistent—to get closer to the source.

His jaw tightens. He keeps his breathing slow. His hands still.

Numbers on the monitor spike, settle, spike again.

The doctor notes them without comment.

“We need you to provide timeline,” she says next, turning off the vial. “When did you meet?”

Wonwoo answers.

“How long were you together?”

He answers.

“Any physical intimacy?”

He answers, voice flat.

“Any mating marks. Any bond initiation?”

“No.”

“Did the omega experience pregnancy?”

Wonwoo’s breath stops for half a second.

He forces it to resume.

“No,” he says. 

The doctor writes and does not question the pause. 

“In the years since your separation,” she asks, “did you experience persistent preoccupation with the omega?”

Wonwoo does not answer immediately. Not because he is uncertain, but because he must decide how to frame the truth.

“I thought about him,” he says. “Occasionally.”

The doctor’s gaze remains neutral. “Did those thoughts interfere with daily functioning?”

Wonwoo considers it.

Four years of controlled living. University. Military service. Schedules stacked with purpose. No empty time left unfilled. No silence left unattended.

“No,” he says. “I remained functional.”

The doctor nods, making a note.

“Did you experience restlessness, irritability, or unexplained agitation during periods of extended isolation?”

Wonwoo’s fingers press once against his knee.

He remembers nights in the barracks when sleep would not come. The sense of vigilance with no object. The impulse to walk perimeter checks he had not been assigned. The way physical exhaustion became easier than stillness.

He answers carefully.

“I enlisted a year after high school graduation,” he says. “It provided structure.”

The doctor does not miss the deflection, but she does not press.

“Did that structure resolve the agitation?”

Wonwoo breathes once, slow.

“No,” he says.

“Did you experience recurring dreams involving the omega?”

Wonwoo’s jaw tightens.

“Yes,” he says. “Occasionally.”

The doctor notes it.

“Did you seek alternative attachments during that time?”

“No.”

The answer is immediate. Clean.

After several more questions, the sensors are removed. The adhesive pulls faintly at his skin. A small irritation. A minor pain. Nothing compared to the quiet violence of what just happened inside his body.

“You can return to the waiting area,” she says. “Results will take some time.”

Wonwoo nods, stands, smooths his jacket as if preparing for a meeting rather than a revelation, and steps out.

By the time he returns, the group has rearranged itself around anxiety.

Soonyoung sits forward on his chair, elbows on knees, fingers laced. Minghao stands by the window, arms crossed, eyes unfocused on the parking lot outside. Jihoon occupies a corner seat, posture relaxed but gaze sharp.

Mingyu’s eyes flick toward Wonwoo. Then away again, polite enough not to ask the obvious question out loud.

Wonwoo sits.

No one speaks for a while.

The hospital hum surrounds them. A cart rolls by. Someone laughs down the hall. A baby cries briefly and then quiets.

Jihoon straightened on his seat. He pulls out his phone, scrolls once, then locks the screen again.

“I looked it up,” he says quietly. “Incomplete bond imprint. It’s rare, but not unheard of. Especially if two people were in close proximity for a long time during adolescence.”

Mingyu looks up. “Close proximity like… dating?”

“Like living in each other’s pockets,” Jihoon replies. “Emotional connection. Physical intimacy. But no formal bond.”

Silence settles heavy among them.

Mingyu turns toward Wonwoo. “You said you dated in high school.”

Wonwoo nods once.

“How long?” Mingyu asks.

“Six months.”

Soonyoung exhales. “That’s not exactly a short relationship.”

“No,” Wonwoo says.

“And you were in the same places a lot?” Jihoon asks. Not prying. Just filling in medical logic.

“Yes,” Wonwoo answers. “After-school clubs. Weekends. Study sessions. For two years.”

Minghao’s brows draw together. “Then why,” he asks, “did you both act like you’d never dated?”

Wonwoo does not answer immediately.

He folds his hands together. Unfolds them. Refolds them.

“We separated,” he says. “Before graduation. No contact afterward.”

“So you decided,” Soonyoung says slowly, “to pretend the past didn’t exist.”

Wonwoo’s voice remains level. “I did not think it was appropriate to bring it up.”

“Because…?” Mingyu asks.

Wonwoo lifts his eyes. Not defensive. Just precise.

“Because we are no longer part of each other’s lives,” he says. “Or so I believed.”

The sentence lands. Simple. Clean. With no place to hide.

Jihoon nods, understanding the implication. “And he followed your lead.”

Minghao looks unsettled now. “So both of you were pretending to be mere acquaintances,” he says, “while sharing a half-formed bond.”

“Apparently,” Wonwoo says.

Soonyoung leans back in his chair, letting the absurdity settle.

“That’s,” he says, “just terrible.”

Wonwoo does not disagree.

No one speaks for a while after that.

Minghao glances toward the corridor again. “Does he know?” he asks. “That he carries a half-formed bond with you?”

“I don’t think so,” Wonwoo says. 

Mingyu swallows. “He’s going to find out,” he says. “And it’s going to be… a lot.”

Wonwoo only nods.

Minutes pass. Then another hour.

Wonwoo does not check the time. He only notes the gradual dulling of adrenaline, the way his body refuses to fully settle, as if waiting for another alarm.

A nurse appears at the waiting room door and calls Wonwoo’s name.

He stands immediately. His friends rise too, instinctively, but the nurse lifts a hand.

“Only you,” she says gently. “The doctor would like to speak with you privately.”

Soonyoung nods at him. Minghao’s eyes are tight with worry. Jihoon gives him a single look that says go. Mingyu says nothing, but his hand presses briefly against Wonwoo’s arm before he lets him pass.

The corridor feels longer this time.

Wonwoo follows the nurse into a small consultation room. It is neutral in every possible way. Beige walls. A table. Two chairs. A box of tissues placed with deliberate optimism. The fluorescent light hums faintly overhead.

The doctor is already inside, reading a tablet. She gestures to the chair across from her. Wonwoo sits. He keeps his posture straight. Hands folded loosely. Expression composed.

The doctor sets the tablet down.

“We have your results,” she says.

Her tone is calm. Not dramatic. Not hesitant. This is not personal for her. It is another case, another chart, another set of data. That steadiness makes the words land harder.

She studies him for a moment, then sets her tablet aside.

“It’s positive,” she says. “You and Wen Junhui share an incomplete bond signature. It is highly likely your body has been maintaining an incomplete bond imprint throughout the separation period.”

Wonwoo absorbs this without visible reaction.

The doctor continues, now with context firmly built.

“The imprint is old but strong. Likely formed through prolonged proximity and emotional attachment,” she says. She pauses, letting him absorb it.

The word attachment lands wrong in Wonwoo’s chest, like a hand pressing on a bruise.

Wonwoo does not react outwardly. He notices, distantly, the faint tightening of his chest. He breathes once. Slow. Controlled.

The doctor continues.

“Incomplete bonds are not uncommon,” she continues. “Under ordinary circumstances, such an imprint either completes into a formal bond as the couple decide to mate, or fades naturally over time after the couple separates. In your case, it persisted.”

She looks at him with quiet certainty. “Persistence over several years without completion or natural dissolution is rare. That typically suggests ongoing physiological activation.”

Meaning, he thinks, without allowing his face to change: ongoing feeling.

He does not say it. He does not confirm it. He cannot.

Wonwoo’s fingers curl once against his knee. He smooths them flat again.

“And this,” the doctor says, “is what likely contributed to today’s event. When you re-entered close proximity after years of separation, the omega’s regulatory system destabilised. Your nervous system, in turn, responded with a protective mate reaction.”

Wonwoo hears the words as if through glass.

Protective mate reaction.

He does not comment on how accurate that felt. How immediate. How involuntary.

“No mating bite has occurred,” the doctor adds. “So surgical bond removal is not applicable.”

Wonwoo nods once. He does not ask how she knows. The test already told her.

He lifts his eyes.

“What are the options?” he says.

The doctor studies him for a moment. She has likely learned to recognise different kinds of fear. He is not showing panic or denial. But the quiet, dangerous kind that calculates consequences before emotion.

“There is no single path,” she says. “But there are medically accepted approaches.”

Wonwoo’s voice is even. “What is the least painful option for him?”

Not for us. Not for me. For him.

The doctor’s expression softens by a degree almost imperceptible.

“For the omega,” the doctor says, “the least physiologically destabilising course is constant exposure to the imprint counterpart.”

Wonwoo remains still.

“Omega regulatory systems are more reactive,” she continues. “When an imprint persists without resolution, their bodies carry the adaptive burden. They compensate hormonally, neurologically, autonomically. Over time that compensation becomes strain.”

Meaning, he thinks, the body suffers what the mind cannot name.

“If the imprint counterpart remains in proximity,” the doctor says, “we can stabilise the system through gradual recalibration. If both parties consent, completion of the bond allows the omega’s physiology to settle into a sustainable baseline.”

She lets the words land before adding,

“Without completion, the imprint continues to draw on his regulatory capacity. You, as an alpha, would primarily experience psychological and affective consequences. He bears the physical load.”

The words are clinical.

The implications are not.

Close proximity. Strengthening. Completion.

Junhui would have to agree. Junhui would have to trust him. Junhui would have to accept a future that Wonwoo once decided to deny him.

Wonwoo swallows once.

“Alternative,” he asks. “If completion is not…desirable?”

This time, the doctor pauses longer.

“There is long-term suppression medication,” she says. “It’s potentially lifelong. It can reduce imprint activation. But it is not ideal. Side effects include autonomic instability, emotional blunting, reduced stress tolerance. There is limited longitudinal data.”

Wonwoo listens.

Lifelong medication. Blunted emotion. Reduced resilience.

A life spent managing a condition born from a bond Junhui never consented to carry alone.

Wonwoo’s jaw tightens. Not in anger, but in resolve.

“What about distance,” he asks. “If I remove myself? Like overseas. For a few years.”

The doctor meets his gaze steadily.

“It might reduce activation over time,” she says. “But you reunited after prolonged separation. His system has re-registered your presence. Abrupt withdrawal now carries a high risk of separation shock.”

“He has already endured one long adjustment alone,” she adds, gentle now without becoming sentimental. “Another sudden withdrawal could be destabilising.”

Wonwoo exhales through his nose.

Another abandonment would hurt him more.

He nods once. He understands. He hates it. There is no path where Junhui walks away untouched. Only paths where harm is measured.

The doctor slides a pamphlet across the table. Words. Diagrams. Statistics. Support contacts.

Wonwoo does not look at it yet.

He asks no more questions. There are no questions left that lead to an answer he can tolerate.

The doctor looks at him. “He’s in a drug induced sleep,” she says. “We’ll keep him under observation. When he’s stable enough, we’ll explain the situation and discuss consent-based options. He will not be pressured into any decision.”

Wonwoo nods again.

Consent. Options. Decisions. All words that assume Junhui has room to choose.

Wonwoo inclines his head in thanks and leaves the room. The corridor feels shorter this time. But his steps are heavier.

Wonwoo sits back down in the hard plastic chair. His hands are calm now. His body is still tense, but a different kind of tension, more controlled, more deliberate. Like bracing for impact.

He thinks, for the first time, not of romance, not even of regret.

He thinks only of one unacceptable fact.

Junhui is suffering.

And whatever this bond is, whatever it means, whatever it has been doing quietly in the background of their lives for years, it has now made itself a visible problem with consequences.

Wonwoo can endure consequences. He has been trained for them.

He cannot accept Junhui paying for them.

The curtain rustles faintly.

A nurse steps out, checks a chart, disappears again.

Wonwoo remains sitting in the same chair, posture composed, face unreadable. The heir to a dynasty under fluorescent lighting, waiting for the one person he has never been able to treat like a problem to solve.

Notes:

When I imagined this chapter, I kept returning to a single question: what does it mean to try to protect someone, and still cause harm?

Wonwoo left Junhui believing that distance would be kinder than staying. In another world, that might have been true. But in this ABO universe, attachment is not only emotional. It is biological. It leaves traces in the nervous system, in hormone regulation, in the way the body learns another body as home.

Wonwoo never stopped loving Junhui. Quietly, privately, without acting on it. He believed that as long as he did not return, as long as he did not interfere, Junhui could heal. What he did not understand was that unfinished bonds do not dissolve as long as both people keep their feelings alive.

This fic is not about destiny or soulmates. It is about unintended consequences. About how good intentions do not guarantee harmless outcomes. The irony is that Wonwoo’s silent love caused the very harm he believed would only come if he had chosen to act on it.

Chapter 6: I waited four years to say your name again

Summary:

“You can ask questions,” Junhui says after a pause. “But I may not answer all of them.”

The words come out steady, but Wonwoo hears the effort underneath. Like Junhui is building a boundary with shaking hands and pretending they’re not shaking.

“I may never answer some of them.”

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

The hospital room never really gets dark.

Even at this hour, the ceiling light is dimmed instead of off, as if the building refuses to admit that anyone inside it is allowed real sleep. The corridor beyond the door breathes with muted footsteps and distant wheels. Somewhere down the hall a monitor chirps and then quiets. The air smells like disinfectant and warm plastic, and underneath it, something faintly bitter that the hospital tries to scrub out of existence but never fully can.

Junhui lies on the bed with an IV line taped neatly to his hand. The blanket is pulled up to his chest. His hair is slightly mussed from the stretcher, from fingers not his own, from the small indignities that come with being handled when you are too dizzy to refuse it properly. His face in sleep looks younger than it should. Not fragile. Just unguarded in the way people become when their bodies are forced to shut down.

Wonwoo sits in the chair beside the bed with his hands clasped loosely between his knees.

He has not slept. He has not even tried to pretend.

Every time his eyes threaten to close, his mind presents him with a new angle to consider, a new failure to catalogue. Distance. Proximity. Suppressants. Side effects. The doctor’s calm voice laying out options as if human lives can be arranged like schedules. He has been trained to think that way. He has been praised for thinking that way. It is supposed to be a strength.

Tonight it feels like the problem.

He watches Junhui’s breathing, the slow rise and fall of his chest. Earlier it was uneven, shallow with residual panic, his body chasing an equilibrium it could not catch. Now, sedated, it has become more regular. The monitor confirms it with indifferent numbers.

Wonwoo should be relieved.

Instead, he finds himself counting each breath as if it is proof of something. As if the fact that Junhui’s body can still settle at all is an achievement. As if he has been holding his own breath for four years and only just noticed.

He does not touch Junhui.

Not even when the blanket slips slightly and exposes the wrist, pale under fluorescent light, veins faintly visible beneath the skin. Not even when Junhui’s fingers twitch in sleep and the instinct in Wonwoo’s body moves toward him like a reflexive reach.

He notices the urge now.

It is an urge to get closer. To check. To anchor. To claim space near Junhui’s body in the way his nervous system keeps insisting is necessary. It’s always been there. Wonwoo has just been very good at ignoring it or calling it something else. 

Wonwoo sits on his hands for a moment until the impulse dulls into something he can control again.

Outside this room, the world continues as if this is a minor incident. A weeknight. Students sleeping. Classes waiting in the morning. His friends have gone back to their dorms and their apartments and their routines, because only one person is allowed to stay the night in Junhui’s hospital room, and Wonwoo is the obvious choice. They promised to come back once classes end tomorrow.

And now it is just him.

The minutes drag. The clock on the wall barely moves.

Junhui shifts once, an unconscious adjustment, brows knitting briefly as if he is chasing away a dream he refuses to remember. Wonwoo’s attention sharpens immediately. His muscles tighten. He leans forward without meaning to, stops himself before the movement becomes obvious.

Junhui’s eyes flutter.

At first it is only that, lashes trembling against his cheek. Then his throat works in a small swallow. His breathing changes, no longer purely mechanical. Awareness returns in increments: body first, then room, then memory.

His gaze opens unfocused, searching the ceiling, the corner of the room, the curtain half-drawn around the bed. Confusion flickers. The reflexive body-check comes next. His fingers move slightly, as if taking inventory of what is attached to him, what is wrong with him, how much of himself is still under his control.

And then his eyes land on Wonwoo.

The change is immediate.

Junhui tries to sit up.

It is not gradual, not cautious. It is the instinctive motion of someone who wakes and immediately needs distance. His shoulders tense. His core engages. His hand pulls against the IV line. His breath catches, sharp and thin, like he has bitten into cold air.

Wonwoo is on his feet before he realizes he has moved.

He closes the distance to the bedside in two steps and stops himself at the last possible point. His hands lift, then hover, then turn outward, palms open in the universal shape of restraint. He does not touch Junhui’s arm. He does not press him back. He does not do the one simple thing his body wants to do, which is to hold him steady and make the panic stop.

Instead he grips the bed rail, hard, and braces it so it does not shake with Junhui’s sudden movement.

“Don’t,” Wonwoo says, voice low. It comes out too firm. He softens it immediately. “You have an IV.”

Junhui’s chest rises and falls too quickly. His eyes are wide now, fully awake in the worst way. He looks at Wonwoo as if Wonwoo is the problem that has returned to the room, unavoidable and inescapable.

“Why are you here?” Junhui asks. He’s using polite speech. Even in this state, he is careful.

Wonwoo hears the distance he puts in the question.

He answers the simplest fact. “You were brought in last night.”

Junhui swallows again. His gaze flicks to the side, as if searching for someone else, any other arrangement of reality. “Where are the others?”

“They went back,” Wonwoo says. “They have classes.”

Junhui’s jaw tightens. The expression is controlled, but it reads like humiliation. His eyes flick down to his own body, the hospital bracelet, the monitor leads, the IV tape. He exhales through his nose, a small harsh sound that might be laughter in another context but here is only contempt for the weakness of flesh.

“I’m fine,” Junhui says, as if saying it can make it true. “You can go.”

Wonwoo does not sit back down. He remains standing beside the bed, one hand still on the rail, the other hanging at his side because he does not trust it. He can feel the pull in his chest, the wrongness of being told to leave when his nervous system is still tuned to Junhui’s breathing as if it is a vital sign of his own.

“You weren’t fine,” Wonwoo says. The words are factual. He forces them not to sound like an accusation. “You’re stable now. But if not managed, your condition can get worse.”

Junhui’s eyes narrow slightly. “What condition?” 

A nurse appears a moment later, drawn in by Wonwoo’s pressing the call button. She checks the IV line, adjusts the blanket with efficient hands, asks Junhui in a calm tone how he is feeling. Junhui answers in the same calm tone, as if he has always been composed, as if he did not nearly collapse outside his dorm entrance hours ago.

The nurse leaves after assuring that the doctor will drop by soon. The room regains its thin quiet.

Junhui sits more upright now, careful with the IV, shoulders squared in a posture that tries to restore dignity. He keeps his eyes off Wonwoo for a moment, looking instead at the small table, the water cup, the paper wrapper of a syringe packet. His fingers flex once against the blanket.

“What happened,” he asks at last, voice still measured, 

“You went into distress, last night after dinner,” Wonwoo says. “Your blocker failed. You were sweating, dizzy. Your breathing wasn’t steady.”

Junhui’s mouth tightens. He looks away again, as if the words themselves are too bright.

“And you,” he says. He says it like a separate category. “Why were you there?”

Wonwoo could give the easiest answer: coincidence. He could lie in a way that would soothe Junhui’s pride. He could say Minghao called him and he came because anyone would.

But Junhui’s body does not need soothing. It needs truth.

“I came because Minghao messaged,” Wonwoo says. 

Junhui’s gaze returns to him, sharp. “And you were in the ambulance.”

“Yes.”

Junhui’s eyes soften for half a second, not with warmth, but with something like dread. He looks down at his hands as if they have betrayed him. “I didn’t want that,” he says quietly. “I didn’t want you to see.”

Wonwoo feels the sentence settle in his chest like weight.

He cannot answer in the way he wants to. He cannot say you never had to hide from me. He cannot say I have been thinking about you since I left you.

As if summoned by the line, the doctor comes in soon after, tablet in hand, expression professional and composed. She greets Junhui directly, checks his vitals, asks a few questions about symptoms. Junhui answers without drama. He describes his body the way a person describes weather: sudden onset, suppressants taken, unusual intensity, dizziness, shortness of breath.

Wonwoo stands slightly back near the foot of the bed, quiet. He keeps his hands visible. He makes himself smaller without leaving.

The doctor glances at him once, then returns her attention to Junhui.

The doctor glances once at Wonwoo, then returns her attention to Junhui.

“Mr. Wen Junhui,” she says gently, “your body has been reacting to a specific proximity stimulus over the past few weeks. Because you are on long-term pheromone suppression, you were not consciously aware of the reaction. But the physiological response continued underneath.”

Junhui’s expression shifts, almost imperceptibly.

“Your system compensated for a time,” she continues. “But the regulatory load accumulated. Last night, when that proximity ended abruptly, your body exceeded its suppression threshold. That is what caused the distress episode.”

Junhui blinks slowly. The explanation lands before the terminology does.

Only then does the doctor add,

“The underlying cause is an incomplete bond imprint.”

Junhui’s face goes still. As if every muscle has frozen in the effort to maintain composure.

“No,” Junhui says. The word is immediate. Reflexive.

The doctor remains calm. “We ran an assessment on the alpha who accompanied you,” she says, careful with language. “His response pattern matches yours. The signature is consistent.”

Junhui’s eyes flick, unwillingly, toward Wonwoo. He looks at him for a single beat and then looks away again, as if eye contact would be agreement.

“That’s not possible,” Junhui says, voice strained now, the first crack. “We were never… we didn’t… there was no bite.”

“No bite,” the doctor agrees. “Which is why it is incomplete.”

Junhui’s fingers curl into the blanket. His knuckles whiten. “Then it should have faded,” he says. “It’s been years.”

“It usually does,” the doctor says. “Which is why we asked about your recent contact history.”

She checks her tablet.

“You re-entered regular proximity approximately three weeks ago,” she says. “Shared social environments. Group gatherings. Shared facilities. No private meetings. No physical contact. No scent exchange beyond ambient exposure.”

Junhui listens. His expression remains controlled. But the cadence of his breathing changes.

“In an incomplete imprint,” the doctor continues, “the body retains a recognition pathway even when the conscious bond is unacknowledged. Pheromone blockers suppress awareness of that recognition. They do not erase the underlying response.”

She lets that settle before going on.

“So when you returned to repeated proximity with the imprint counterpart, your body began reacting. Subtly at first. Hormonal shifts. Autonomic adjustments. Increased baseline stress load. Because awareness was suppressed, you could not behaviourally compensate. No avoidance. No seeking. No recalibration.”

Meaning, Wonwoo thinks: the body worked alone.

“For a time,” the doctor says, “your system compensated. But the strain accumulates when a regulatory loop runs without feedback.”

Junhui’s jaw tightens.

“And last night,” she says, “after the group gathering ended, you separated from the proximity stimulus. That sudden withdrawal, combined with an already saturated system, exceeded the blocker’s suppression threshold.”

Junhui exhales through his nose. A slow, sharp breath.

“The distress episode,” the doctor says, “was not sudden onset. It was the point at which your body could no longer contain an ongoing reaction.”

The doctor continues, “This can be managed, but we need to get you to understand the gravity of the situation.”

Junhui exhales slowly, like he is counting to keep his voice steady. “I’ve been managing,” he says. “I’m fine.”

The doctor does not contradict him with pity. She contradicts him with fact.

“You were brought in by ambulance,” she says. “Your system destabilised under the accumulated stress. If unmanaged, the episodes can become more severe. Mr. Wen Junhui, I’m sorry, but this is likely going to be a recurring event if we don’t establish a way forward that works for you.”

Junhui’s gaze drops. For the first time since waking, the pride that held his posture upright seems to fight with something underneath it, a controlled panic that has nowhere to go.

Wonwoo watches the struggle happen on Junhui’s face. He is watching for proof, and he finds it in the worst place: Junhui’s refusal is not the refusal of someone who is indifferent. It is the refusal of someone who cannot afford to need.

The doctor does not lecture. She simply speaks, one piece at a time, as if laying tools on a tray. Staying in close proximity, so Junhui’s body can settle instead of lurching between extremes. Regular monitoring, so warning signs are caught before they become emergencies. Any decision about bonding made only with Junhui’s consent, not forced or rushed. Medication, if chosen, would dampen the imprint but carry its own costs, a lifetime of managing side effects and uncertainty. And distance—running from each other again—she describes gently but firmly as the least reliable path now that Junhui’s body has already remembered.

She speaks like someone describing weather patterns. But each word lands in the room like a stone dropped into still water.

Junhui hears the words. He absorbs them. He says almost nothing.

When the doctor leaves, the quiet that remains is different. It is not the quiet of night. It is the quiet after a door has been opened and cannot be closed again.

Junhui stares at the blanket for a long time.

Wonwoo does not speak. He waits. He lets Junhui have the first move, the first decision, because that is the only thing he can offer that does not feel like taking.

 

Junhui’s fingers shift against the blanket. Once. Twice. Then they still. A moment later his thumb begins rubbing the edge of the fabric, back and forth, as if checking that the world is still textured.

His foot moves under the blanket. A small restless adjustment. His shoulders square, then ease, then square again.

He is thinking. Hard.

Wonwoo stays where he is. Breathing evenly. Present.

Junhui clears his throat. The sound is small.

“I don’t understand,” he says.

His voice is steady, but the words come slower than usual, as if each one must pass inspection before leaving his mouth.

“How can there be… a half-bond?” he asks. “Between us. After all these years?”

He does not look at Wonwoo when he says it.

Wonwoo does not answer. Not because he does not have an answer. But because the real answer would change everything, and Junhui has not asked for that yet.

Junhui’s fingers resume their movement. Rub. Pause. Rub.

“And my body,” he says, quieter now. “Reacting to you, without me knowing. For weeks.” He exhales through his nose. “It’s ridiculous.” A beat. “My body is a poorly written subplot.”

The corner of his mouth lifts, barely. It does not reach his eyes.

Wonwoo watches it happen. The way Junhui makes light of something to keep it from swallowing him whole.

“I took my suppressant, always had my blocker on,” Junhui says. “I didn’t approach you. I didn’t…” He stops. Recalculates. “I did everything I was supposed to.”

The sentence ends there. Not accusation. Just statement.

Wonwoo nods once. Acknowledging, not defending.

Junhui shifts again, drawing one knee slightly up under the blanket. A protective curl, barely there.

“So,” he says. “If I understand correctly…”

He glances toward the door, as if the doctor might be listening, then back to the blanket.

“If I stay near you,” he says. “If there is… contact.” The word is chosen carefully. “Then my condition might stabilise.”

“Yes,” Wonwoo says.

Junhui’s jaw tightens. He is not convinced. Or maybe he is too convinced, and that is the problem.

“And the other option,” he says, “is medication. Forever. That might or might not work.”

“Yes.”

Junhui breathes out slowly. He is quiet again for a long time.

His fingers stop moving.

Then start again.

“I can’t think about,” he says, and pauses, “making any permanent decision. Not right now.”

“I won’t ask you to,” Wonwoo says.

Junhui flicks his gaze up, quick and searching. Checking for pressure. Finding none.

“What if,” Junhui says, voice softer now, the words no longer crisp, “we try the first part?”

He does not sound confident. His tone is far from firm. His words are half a question and half a proposal. They’re equal parts a plea as well.

“Staying near. Monitoring. Whatever contact is needed so I don’t end up back here.” He swallows. “And later… when I’m better… we decide what happens after.”

He finally looks at Wonwoo.

His eyes are steady. But there is something underneath them now. It’s not hope, nor trust. But something closer to standing on the edge of a cliff and asking whether the bridge will hold.

“Is that… possible?” he asks.

Wonwoo answers immediately.

“Yes.”

No hesitation. No negotiation. No counterproposal.

“Yes,” he repeats. “Whatever you need.”

Junhui studies him for another long moment.

Then, slowly, he nods. Once. Small. Final.

It is not reconciliation, or forgiveness.

It’s just two people agreeing to move forward, because standing still has become more dangerous than stepping closer.

Footsteps gather outside the door before the knock comes, soft and careful, as if they’re afraid of making the room notice them.

Soonyoung’s voice follows. “Jun. It’s us.”

Junhui’s fingers tighten on the blanket. He’s visibly bracing himself, Wonwoo notes.

Wonwoo does not move. He waits for Junhui to decide.

“Come in,” Junhui says.

The door opens in a staggered line.

Mingyu enters first, too tall for the quiet of the room, holding a plastic bag that looks like it contains half a convenience store. Minghao slips in after him with a two-stack food container, expression calm in the way he gets when he’s trying to hold everyone else together. Jihoon comes next, hands in his pockets, expression calm but eyes attentive. Soonyoung brings up the rear, shoulders tense like he’s been holding his breath since last night.

They all stop at the same time when they see Junhui sitting up, IV taped to his hand, hospital bracelet catching the light.

Mingyu’s brow furrows. “You look… awake.”

Junhui blinks at him. “Observant.”

Mingyu huffs a laugh that dies too quickly. He steps closer anyway, like his body doesn’t know how not to.

Minghao sets the container down. “We brought soup. And something that claims to be porridge.”

“So it’s hospital food, but from outside,” Junhui says.

“Exactly,” Minghao replies, as if that solves something.

Soonyoung doesn’t sit right away. He just stands there a moment, eyes darting between Junhui and Wonwoo, then to the monitor, then back to Junhui’s face.

“Are you actually okay?” he asks.

Junhui’s mouth tightens. “Define okay.”

Jihoon’s gaze settles on the IV line, then on Junhui’s pupils, then on his hands. He says quietly, “You’re still shaky.”

Junhui looks away.

Wonwoo remains in his seat, hands folded, posture controlled. He does not try to fill the silence.

Mingyu finally pulls a chair closer and sits down like he’s claiming it for the group. “Doctor said you’re staying overnight?”

Junhui nods.

“And tomorrow?” Mingyu asks.

Junhui’s thumb rubs the edge of the blanket. Once. Twice. Stops.

Wonwoo answers before the quiet can turn into pressure. “He’ll be discharged tomorrow morning if his vitals stay stable. Follow-up appointment after.”

Soonyoung’s eyes narrow slightly. “And the half-bond thing.” His tone isn’t accusation. It’s frustration at a puzzle he didn’t ask for. “What are we doing about that?”

Junhui’s shoulders go still.

Wonwoo speaks, evenly. “There are two options. The doctor will come back later to go over them again.”

“So tell us now,” Mingyu says, blunt but not harsh. “We’re here. Jun’s here. You’re here. What are the options.”

Wonwoo doesn’t look at Mingyu. He looks at Junhui, as if checking whether he’s allowed to say it.

Junhui gives a small nod. Barely there.

Wonwoo turns back to them.

“Best-case scenario,” he says, “is stabilising the bond through controlled proximity.”

Soonyoung gives a short laugh with no humour. “Controlled proximity,” he repeats. “Meaning… you two staying together?”

Wonwoo’s pause is brief. “Yes.”

Junhui’s jaw tightens at the word, as if the sound itself is too intimate for a hospital room.

“And the other option?” Jihoon asks.

“Medication,” Wonwoo says. “Long-term suppression. It’s potentially lifelong. But there are side effects and reduced efficacy over time.”

Mingyu’s expression hardens. “That doesn’t sound good.”

Silence drops again. Not awkward now. Heavy.

Junhui exhales through his nose, a small sound that might be amusement if it weren’t so tired.

Soonyoung finally sits down. When he does, the chair scrapes too loud. He doesn’t care.

“So,” he says, looking at Wonwoo now, “you and him.” He gestures vaguely between them. “You dated. That part we know.”

Junhui’s gaze drops to his blanket.

Soonyoung’s voice softens, but his eyes stay sharp. “And you just… didn’t tell us?”

Wonwoo answers calmly. “I wasn’t here.”

“You were back for weeks,” Soonyoung says. Not angry, but the annoyance finally stepping out. “And you still didn’t say anything.”

Wonwoo doesn’t flinch. “It wasn’t mine to reveal.”

“So whose is it?” Soonyoung asks, and immediately regrets how it sounds. He rubs his forehead. “No, sorry. That came out wrong.”

Jihoon cuts in, gentle but firm. “It didn’t come out wrong. It’s just not the moment.”

Minghao nods. “We don’t need details right now. We need a plan.”

Mingyu looks between them again. “And Junhui.” His voice shifts, careful. “You’re… okay with the proximity option?”

Junhui doesn’t answer immediately. His thumb rubs the blanket edge again. He looks like he’s doing math in his head and hates every number.

“I’m not okay with anything,” he says at last. “But I’m also not interested in ending up here again.”

Soonyoung’s jaw works, as if he wants to say ten different things and chooses none.

Junhui glances up, briefly. “Stop looking at me like that.”

Soonyoung scoffs. “Like what.”

“Like I’m…” Junhui pauses, searching. “Like I’m fragile.”

Mingyu’s expression softens into something almost helpless. “You’re not fragile. You’re just… in a hospital.”

Junhui closes his eyes for a second, then opens them again. “Great. Thank you for clarifying.”

That earns the smallest, reluctant smile from Minghao. Jihoon’s mouth twitches too, then smooths.

Soonyoung leans forward, elbows on his knees. “Okay. Practical question. If the ‘proximity’ thing is the plan, where are you staying?”

Junhui’s shoulders tense again.

Wonwoo answers before Junhui has to wrestle the shame of being asked.

“He’ll stay with me,” Wonwoo says.

Four sets of eyes turn to him.

Wonwoo continues, still even. “I have an apartment off campus. Close enough to the hospital. There’s space.”

He does not say it’s more like a penthouse than an apartment. He does not say whose building it is. He does not say it has multiple units. He does not say his family’s name is on the deed.

Minghao studies him, then nods. “That makes sense.”

Soonyoung’s gaze lingers on Wonwoo a second longer. He looks like he wants to argue, then chooses restraint.

Jihoon’s eyes flick to Junhui’s hand, the IV, the slight tremor in his fingers. Then back to Junhui’s face.

“You don’t have to do this alone,” he says, quiet.

Junhui’s throat moves. He looks away, as if swallowing the sentence without letting it touch him.

Minghao clears his throat gently. “We’ll help however we can,” he says. “Checking in. Bringing food. Notes. Whatever you need.”

Mingyu nods. “I’ll carry your stuff. Your laundry. Your pride, apparently, since it’s heavy.”

Junhui stares at him.

Mingyu shrugs. “I’m serious.”

Soonyoung lets out a breath. “And when you’re ready to talk about the past,” he says, looking between Wonwoo and Junhui, “we’ll listen.”

He pauses, then adds, quieter, aimed at Wonwoo, “I’m still annoyed you hid it.”

Wonwoo meets his gaze. “I know.”

Soonyoung’s annoyance doesn’t disappear, but it doesn’t sharpen either. It just… settles into something bearable.

He nods once. “Fine. Talk to Junhui first.”

Wonwoo’s voice stays calm. “Will do.”

The group stays until visiting hours nudge them out. They leave soup, notes, and too many small comforts that pretend they can patch something this large.

When the door closes again, the room is quiet.

But it no longer feels like emptiness.

It feels like the start of a plan.

The rest of the evening passes in small increments.

A nurse comes in to check Junhui’s vitals. The IV line is inspected, retaped with quick practiced hands. The monitor is glanced at, adjusted, left alone. Junhui answers questions with nods and short sentences. He doesn’t complain. He doesn’t joke. He simply exists through it with the kind of composure that looks like strength until you realise it is also a habit.

After the nurse leaves, the room settles back into its dim hush.

Junhui’s breathing is steadier now. The worst of the panic has drained out of his body, leaving behind fatigue that sits heavy in his limbs. His eyes close for long stretches, then open again, unfocused, as if sleep keeps trying to take him and he keeps refusing out of sheer instinct.

Wonwoo stays in the same chair.

He doesn’t scroll his phone. He doesn’t read. He watches the rise and fall of Junhui’s chest the way he watched it earlier, except now there is something else underneath the watching. Something he can’t unlearn after tonight.

If he listens, really listens, he can feel Junhui.

Not the scent, not the visible proof of skin and breath and hospital lights.

Something quieter. A presence at the back of his mind, like a thought that isn’t his but has been sitting there for so long it has started to feel familiar. At first, last night, it was only a vague pressure. A pull he refused to name.

Now it has shape.

Not words. Not images. Just a constant awareness: there.

It doesn’t lead him anywhere. It doesn’t tell him what to do. It simply refuses to disappear.

An afterthought that won’t be ignored.

Maybe this is what an incomplete bond does, Wonwoo thinks. It leaves the door half-open. It lets you feel the draft but never shows you the room on the other side.

Junhui shifts once, slow and careful, as if his body aches. His fingers move against the blanket, then stop.

He doesn’t look at Wonwoo when he speaks.

“Military,” Junhui says quietly. “How was it?”

The question is simple. Almost polite. But it lands like a test, because it is the first time Junhui has offered a door that isn’t about symptoms or logistics.

Wonwoo answers in the same quiet voice.

“It was okay,” he says. “Mostly following orders.”

Junhui hums, eyes still on his hands. “You’re good at that.”

Wonwoo gives a small sound in return. Agreement. Not pride.

The room breathes around them.

Junhui doesn’t add anything. He doesn’t ask for details. Wonwoo doesn’t offer them. They both understand how easy it would be for the conversation to fall into past-tense comfort, and neither of them reaches for that.

But the fact that Junhui asked at all loosens something in Wonwoo’s chest.

It isn’t permission. Not exactly.

Just a sign that Junhui is still here, awake enough to notice the person beside his bed, not only the body that caused his collapse.

Wonwoo’s fingers curl once against his knee.

He chooses his own question carefully, like stepping onto thin ice.

“Why are you a freshman?” he asks.

Junhui’s response is immediate.

A short laugh, bitter enough to scrape. He turns his face away toward the wall, as if the room suddenly has something else worth looking at.

For a moment, Wonwoo thinks Junhui won’t answer at all.

Then Junhui speaks, voice low, still turned away.

“Jeon Wonwoo.”

Wonwoo’s spine straightens at the sound of his name from Junhui’s mouth. It is not harsh. It is not soft. It is simply… deliberate.

“You can ask questions,” Junhui says after a pause. “But I may not answer all of them.”

The words come out steady, but Wonwoo hears the effort underneath. Like Junhui is building a boundary with shaking hands and pretending they’re not shaking.

“I may never answer some of them.”

Junhui turns his head back then, slowly, and looks at Wonwoo for the first time in a while without flinching.

“Can you accept that?” he asks.

The question is quiet.

It is also enormous.

Wonwoo feels it strike through him, straight to the place where guilt has been sitting since last night. Because what Junhui is really asking is not about questions.

It is: Can you accept what you don’t know? Can you accept that something happened while you were gone? Can you accept that I survived it without you and I might not let you near it?

Wonwoo swallows.

The awareness at the back of his mind sharpens, as if the bond itself is listening.

He forces himself not to reach for Junhui’s hand. Not to fill the space with promises. Not to plead for information he hasn’t earned.

He only nods.

“Yes,” he says.

Junhui holds his gaze for one more second, as if checking whether the answer is true.

Then he exhales and lets his eyes drop.

“I’m tired,” Junhui says.

He shifts, careful of the IV, and lies back down. His body turns away from Wonwoo, facing the wall. A simple movement that draws a line through the room without needing words.

“I’m going to sleep.”

Wonwoo doesn’t respond right away.

He watches the back of Junhui’s head, the curve of his shoulder beneath the blanket, the slow settling of his breathing as his body finally gives in.

Minutes pass.

The monitor ticks softly. The corridor breathes.

Wonwoo keeps sitting there, hands clasped, the presence at the back of his mind steady and strange and impossible to ignore.

When Junhui’s breathing deepens, when the room is quiet enough that even thought feels loud, Wonwoo leans forward just slightly, as if speaking too loudly might break something.

His voice comes out as a whisper.

“Good night, Junhui.”

The name leaves his mouth and hangs in the air like a confession he didn’t mean to make.

It is the first time he has said it out loud in four years.

And his body, traitor that it is, eases as if it has been waiting for that small act of recognition all along.

Notes:

This chapter is less about revelation and more about negotiation. Nothing is resolved here on purpose. Every step forward is cautious, because neither Junhui nor Wonwoo is ready to put clear names to what sits between them. The feelings are still there; they never really left. But they are tangled in years of absence, guilt, grief, and the simple fact of having lived separate lives. So instead of reconciliation, what happens here is a quiet agreement to see whether sharing space again is even possible.

Wonwoo moves carefully throughout this chapter. He does not touch without invitation. He does not push for answers. He does not fill silences that Junhui creates. After years of believing that leaving was the only way to protect Junhui, he now has to learn how to stay without taking more than he is offered. To be present without assuming he still has a claim.

Junhui’s agreement is not forgiveness, and it is not trust. It is, first of all, a practical choice to keep himself safe. The boundary he sets — that some questions may never be answered — is both self-protection and a quiet test. Can Wonwoo remain beside him without demanding access to everything that changed in his absence?

So this chapter ends with a fragile olive branch. It's not yet a reunion, and there is no promise. Just two people acknowledging that what they felt did not disappear, and choosing, for now, not to walk away again.

Thank you for reading.

Chapter 7: under one roof, learning how to breathe

Summary:

“Would you like to sleep here?” he asks.

He does not add with me. He does not need to.

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

The hospital room shifts from night to day not through windows, but through the ceiling light brightening by a fraction. The air remains the same: clean, dry, faintly bitter. The monitor continues its steady rhythm, indifferent to time.

Junhui is awake when Wonwoo opens his eyes. Or perhaps he never slept. It is difficult to tell. He lies on his back now, blanket smoothed neatly over his legs, IV still taped to his hand. His face is composed again. Whatever rawness had surfaced during the night has been pressed back into place, hidden behind careful breathing and straight posture.

Wonwoo sits beside the bed in the same chair he has occupied since last night. His jacket remains folded on the backrest. His phone lies face-down in his pocket. Nothing in his posture suggests exhaustion, though his body has not rested. He watches Junhui’s breathing, slower now, more controlled.

A knock at the door.

The doctor enters with a tablet tucked under one arm. She greets Junhui first, as she should. Junhui answers with polite speech, voice quiet but steady. He is already wearing the new patch on the side of his neck, placed earlier by a nurse. It sits like a small square of pale fabric against his skin, unobtrusive, almost innocent.

The doctor checks the monitor, the IV line, the chart. Then she turns to Junhui, not to Wonwoo.

“Your vitals remained stable overnight,” she says. “No further autonomic spikes. No respiratory instability. That’s good.”

Junhui nods once.

“The new pheromone patch suppresses outward projection only,” she continues. “It will not suppress internal regulation. That means you will be aware of physiological responses instead of your body handling them in silence. If you feel dizziness, tremors, breath changes, or sudden heat, you come back here as soon as possible.”

Junhui listens without interrupting.

“The goal,” the doctor says, “is to prevent accumulation. Awareness is protective now. So listen to your body.”

Junhui gives a second nod. Smaller this time.

The doctor scrolls on her tablet.

“For the next week, you are to remain in consistent proximity with the imprint counterpart,” she says, tone clinical.”

Junhui’s gaze flicks, once, toward Wonwoo. Then away again.

“Physical contact,” the doctor adds, “is to be established as tolerated. You should feel the push now that your emotional and physiological responses are more aligned. But if any contact triggers distress, you stop. ”

Junhui’s fingers shift against the blanket. He does not speak.

The doctor continues.

“No strenuous activity. No intense exercise. No overstimulation. And—” she pauses briefly, only just long enough to acknowledge the awkwardness “—no sexual activity during this stabilisation period.”

Silence.

Then, dry as dust on a shelf, Junhui says, “Noted.”

His voice is even. The corner of his mouth does not move. But the absurdity lands anyway.

Wonwoo feels a single, involuntary twitch at the edge of his jaw. It disappears as quickly as it came.

The doctor nods, satisfied. “Follow-up assessment is scheduled for next Tuesday, nine a.m. We will re-evaluate autonomic stability, hormonal markers, and psychological tolerance.”

She finally turns to Wonwoo.

“You will accompany him,” she says. Not a question.

Wonwoo inclines his head once.

The doctor returns her attention to Junhui. “Do you have questions?”

Junhui looks at his IV line. At the blanket. At the patch on his neck.

Then he lifts his eyes.

“If I follow all this,” he asks, “I won’t end up here again?”

The doctor does not promise what she cannot guarantee.

“It significantly reduces the risk,” she says. “And if symptoms emerge, we will intervene early.”

Junhui accepts that. He nods again.

“I understand.”

The doctor smiles politely. It does not reach sentimentality.

“You’ll be discharged within the hour,” she says. “Rest today. Eat something light. Avoid unnecessary stress.”

She leaves. The door closes. The monitor continues.

Junhui exhales. Not shakily this time. Just a quiet release of held breath.

Wonwoo does not speak immediately.

He waits until Junhui’s fingers stop worrying the blanket.

Then he says, simply, “We’ll follow the instructions.”

Junhui glances at him. A brief look. Then he looks away again.

Junhui does not speak again until the nurse arrives to remove the IV.

The tape peels away with a soft sound. The needle slides out. A small cotton pad is pressed to the back of his hand. Junhui watches the process without flinching, as if witnessing something happening to someone else’s body. When the nurse tapes the cotton in place, his fingers flex once, testing control.

Discharge paperwork follows. Signatures. Explanations repeated in softer voices. A plastic bag containing medication. A printed appointment card for next Tuesday, nine a.m.

Junhui accepts everything with both hands.

By the time they step out of the hospital doors, the day has fully formed.

The sky is pale and overcast. A slow wind moves through the car park, carrying the smell of damp concrete and exhaust. People pass by in coats, coffee cups in hand, phones pressed to ears. The world does not pause for anyone’s crisis.

Minghao and Mingyu are waiting near the entrance.

Minghao stands with two large tote bags and a backpack. Junhui’s things, gathered from the dorm in quiet efficiency. Mingyu stands beside him holding a paper cup of coffee and looking like he has not slept.

When they see Junhui, both straighten immediately.

“You’re out,” Mingyu says. Relief and disbelief mix in his voice.

Junhui nods. “I’m out.”

Minghao steps forward without asking and hands him the backpack. Junhui takes it, shoulders dipping slightly under its weight. Minghao’s eyes scan his face, his posture, the new patch on his neck. He says nothing, but his concern is clear.

“You look better than last night,” Minghao says finally.

Junhui exhales through his nose. “That’s a low bar.”

Mingyu snorts once, then sobers again. “We got your clothes, toothbrush, your books, and your laptop and charger. Also some other stuff we thought you might need.”

Junhui gives a small smile. “Thank you.”

Soonyoung and Jihoon are not here. They had morning classes. But they left messages. Junhui has not checked his phone yet.

A black Bentley rolls to a stop at the curb.

Wonwoo’s driver steps out first, walking around to open the back door. His movements are practiced and impersonal.

Wonwoo takes one of the tote bags from Minghao.

“We should get going,” Wonwoo says.

Minghao studies him for a moment. Then he nods and lets go of the bag.

“Message me,” Minghao says to Junhui, “updates on how you’re doing.”

Junhui meets his eyes. “I will.”

Mingyu steps closer, awkward for once. He hesitates, then pats Junhui’s shoulder once. “Get well soon,” he says. “And don’t scare us again.”

Junhui looks at his hand on his shoulder, then back at Mingyu.

“I’ll try,” he says.

They stand there for another moment. No dramatic farewell. Then Junhui steps toward the car. Before he gets in, he turns back once.

“Thank you,” he says again.

Minghao inclines his head. Mingyu lifts his hand in a small wave.

Then Junhui ducks into the back seat. Wonwoo follows. The door closes. The outside world is sealed away.

The driver gets in. The engine starts. The car pulls away from the curb. The car moves smoothly through late morning traffic.

The city slides past the tinted windows in soft, muted colours. Grey sky. Concrete. Neon signs already lit despite the daylight. Pedestrians in dark coats crossing streets without urgency. Seoul continues as if nothing inside this car matters.

Junhui sits by the window.

The backpack rests on his lap. One hand is placed over it, fingers curled loosely around the strap. The cotton pad on the back of his other hand is taped down, a small square of white against his skin. The hospital wristband remains. He has not tried to remove it yet.

Wonwoo sits beside him, a half-step of distance between their shoulders. Enough to respect space. Not enough to feel separate.

Neither of them speaks.

The driver’s presence is quiet and contained. The partition remains open, but he does not glance back. He does not turn on the radio. He does not ask questions. His job is motion, not curiosity.

Junhui watches the city.

His reflection drifts across the window glass, superimposed over passing buildings. Sometimes he seems to be looking at himself. Sometimes through himself. His breathing is steady. Controlled. Too controlled, like someone holding a fragile object inside their chest.

Wonwoo watches him without turning his head fully. Only small shifts of gaze. Junhui’s jaw. The line of his neck. The new pheromone patch, pale against skin. The hospital band. The backpack strap pulled under Junhui’s fingers.

A minute passes.

Another.

The car turns onto a wider road. Traffic thins. Buildings grow taller, cleaner, newer. Sinchon approaches. Student district. Busy, loud, alive. The kind of place where lives overlap without noticing each other.

His phone vibrates once in his pocket.

He does not take it out. He already knows what it is.

He had sent the message yesterday, while Junhui still slept under hospital sedation. A single instruction to his family’s assistant. Have the penthouse cleaned. Stock the kitchen. Change the sheets. Make it livable.

It would have been done by now. Quietly. Efficiently. Without questions asked aloud.

The driver will log the destination. The assistant will log the driver. The assistant will report completion.

The information will reach his mother by afternoon.

He acknowledges this without reacting.

A crisis for another day.

Junhui shifts slightly, readjusting his hold on the backpack. The movement is small, but Wonwoo feels it in the air between them, like a change in temperature.

Junhui does not look away from the window when he speaks.

“How far?”

His voice is steady. Quiet.

Wonwoo answers immediately.

“Ten minutes.”

Junhui nods once.

They return to silence.

The car turns into a side street lined with young ginkgo trees. Their leaves are still green, not yet ready for autumn. A security gate slides open without the driver slowing. The building rises clean and pale against the grey sky, glass catching what little light there is.

Sinchon. Ten minutes from Yonsei, close enough that students pass this neighbourhood daily without ever knowing what sits above them. Convenient. Discreet. One of several properties his family owns across Seoul. A place to exist without being seen.

But not the family home.

That remains in Gugi-dong, older and heavier with history. The ancestral house where his parents live, where family gatherings happen, where names are carved into wood beams and expectations into bone. This penthouse is not heritage. It is function. A space designed for temporary occupancy. For independence that is never quite independence.

The car disappears into the underground parking.

The driver gets out first. Opens the door. Wonwoo steps out, then reaches back to take one of the tote bags before Junhui has to. Junhui follows, backpack still on his shoulders, medication bag in one hand.

They walk toward the elevator.

The lobby is quiet. Polished stone floors. Soft recessed lighting. A scent of something neutral and expensive that never lingers long enough to identify. A receptionist bows. Wonwoo inclines his head in return. Junhui mirrors the gesture half a beat later.

The elevator ride is smooth. Silent. Numbers climb. The hum of ascent fills the space between them.

Top floor.

The doors open directly into the penthouse.

It is clean. Not hotel-clean, but lived-in clean. The kind of order that suggests someone belongs here, even if they are not here often. Shoes aligned by the entrance.  A book left on the coffee table. A glass water carafe beside the sofa. Light filtering through sheer curtains across wide windows.

The cleaners have done their work. The air is fresh. Kitchen stocked. But the space still carries Wonwoo’s presence. In the placement of objects. In the absence of clutter. In the way nothing is out of place.

Junhui steps inside.

He does not comment on the size. The ceiling height. The corridor stretching beyond sight. The quiet hum of an expensive refrigerator.

He only takes off his shoes and places them neatly by the door.

Wonwoo does the same.

“I’ll show you the rooms,” Wonwoo says.

They walk down the corridor. Their footsteps are muted by carpet. Doors line the hall. Bedrooms. A study. A spare room. Storage.

Wonwoo stops at the first bedroom.

“This one is close to the living room,” he says. “There's bathroom inside.”

He opens the door.

The room is simple. A large bed. Desk. Wardrobe. Fresh linen. A folded towel on the bed. A small lamp. Curtains drawn halfway.

Junhui steps inside and sets his backpack on the bed.

“It’s fine,” he says.

Wonwoo nods.

“If you need anything else, tell me.”

Junhui looks around once more, then back at Wonwoo.

“Thanks,” he says.

Wonwoo accepts it without comment.

He closes the door partway, leaving it ajar just a fraction. Then he continues down the corridor. His own room is farther away, near the end of the hall.

He opens the door.

This room is different. Not styled. Not neutral. Clearly inhabited. Books stacked on the desk. A laptop closed. A basketball in the corner. Clothes folded with military precision. A guitar leaning against the wall, rarely touched but present. A second pillow on the bed, used more than he admits.

He stands for a moment inside his doorway.

This is a space he knows how to exist in. Now Junhui exists here too. Under the same ceiling. Behind a door only a few metres away. 

Wonwoo closes his door gently.

The latch clicks.

For the first time since they were eighteen, they are alone in the same home.

And neither of them yet knows how to breathe inside it.

Lunch arrives without discussion.

Wonwoo orders it while Junhui is still inside the bedroom, door half-closed, quiet on the other side. He uses a delivery app. He selects dishes he remembers Junhui used to choose. 

When the doorbell rings, Wonwoo answers it, accepts the bags, and sets the food on the dining table. Steam rises as he opens the containers. The scent spreads through the apartment.

Only then does he walk down the corridor.

He knocks once on Junhui’s door.

“Lunch,” he says.

There is a brief pause. Then the door opens. Junhui steps out, hair slightly disheveled, sleeves pushed to his elbows. He looks alert but cautious. 

Spicy tofu stew. Rice. Side dishes arranged neatly. Familiar food. Ordinary food. Junhui looks at it. He does not comment. But his shoulders lower slightly, as if a tension he did not notice has eased.

They eat.

They sit across from each other. There is no television. No music. Only the quiet sound of chopsticks against ceramic and the soft hum of the refrigerator.

Junhui eats slowly. The patch on his neck does its work. His breathing remains steady.

Wonwoo eats at a similar pace. Their movements fall into quiet synchrony.

Halfway through the meal, Junhui speaks.

“I can return to classes tomorrow.”

Wonwoo looks up.

The doctor’s instructions rise in his mind.

“Which classes?” he asks.

“Two seminars,” Junhui answers. “Attendance matters.” He pauses. “I’ll be done around noon.”

Wonwoo considers this.

“I will walk you,” he says.

Junhui’s chopsticks stop in midair.

“I can go alone.”

“I know,” Wonwoo says. “But we were told not to separate for long periods.”

Junhui exhales quietly. Something close to resignation passes through his eyes. He returns to eating. The matter is settled.

When they finish, Junhui begins stacking the dishes.

“You do not have to,” Wonwoo says.

“I know,” Junhui replies. “I want to.”

They stand side by side at the sink. Junhui washes. Wonwoo dries. Their hands move in calm coordination. They do not touch but their shoulders remain within the same shared space. Close enough that warmth could be felt if either paid attention to it.

The kitchen returns to order.

After that, they move to the living room in silent agreement.

Junhui sits on the sofa. He takes out his phone and starts playing with it. Wonwoo sits in the armchair opposite him. He opens his laptop. He answers a few emails. He sends a brief message to his professors, notifying them that he will go back to classes in a few days.

They exist in parallel. In the same space. Breathing the same air.

Occasionally, Junhui shifts his posture. Crosses his legs. Rubs his wrist. Each movement draws Wonwoo’s attention for a moment before he returns to his screen.

No one speaks. 

By late afternoon, the light outside changes. Grey becomes muted gold. Shadows stretch across the floor. 

Junhui puts his phone away.

“I am tired,” he says.

Wonwoo closes his laptop. “Let’s eat first.”

They reheat the remaining food from lunch. They eat again. More quietly this time. After eating, Junhui stands.

“I will shower,” he says.

Wonwoo nods.

Junhui disappears into his room. Water runs. Then stops. A door opens and closes. Footsteps pass along the corridor. Junhui walks by with damp hair and loose clothes.

He pauses.

“Good night,” he says.

Wonwoo looks up.

“Good night.”

Junhui turns around and walks back to his room. Wonwoo hears the door close.

Wonwoo remains in the living room for a moment longer. He finishes one last message on his phone. Then he turns off the lights. He walks down the corridor to his room and opens the door.

His room is familiar. Controlled. His.

He sits on the edge of the bed.

Beyond the wall, Junhui is breathing. Existing under the same roof.

They are following instructions. But instructions do not account for the way the air feels different now. For the way the silence has changed shape. Wonwoo lies down and turns off the light.

Wonwoo wakes to the sound of soft knocking. Just three careful taps against wood.

He blinks. The room is dark. The digital clock on his bedside table reads 1:17 a.m.

He sits up.

The knocking comes again. Lighter this time. As if the person on the other side is afraid of disturbing him.

Wonwoo exhales quietly and gets out of bed. He crosses the room without turning on the light and opens the door.

Junhui stands in the corridor.

He is holding a pillow against his chest. It’s held like something necessary. His face is composed. But his shoulders are tight. His hands grip the pillow too firmly. His breathing is careful. Controlled. Like someone trying not to spill something precious.

“I can’t sleep,” Junhui says.

His voice is quiet. Even. But it lands like a confession.

Wonwoo studies him for a moment. The dim corridor light casts soft shadows along Junhui’s jaw, his collarbones, the patch on his neck.

“How can I help?” Wonwoo asks.

Junhui’s fingers tighten on the pillow.

He does not speak.

Wonwoo recognises it. The question Junhui cannot ask. The need he refuses to shape into words. The same way Junhui once refused to say he was hurting, even when it was obvious.

Wonwoo draws a slow breath.

“Would you like to sleep here?” he asks.

He does not add with me. He does not need to.

Junhui looks at him. Really looks. His eyes are dark and unsettled and full of things that have nowhere to go.

He nods once. A small, hesitant thing.

Wonwoo opens the door wider and steps back. He extends his hand into the space between them. Not reaching. Just an offering.

Junhui hesitates.

Then, after several heartbeats, he shifts the pillow to one arm and places his free hand into Wonwoo’s.

His fingers are cool. His grip is careful, not too firm but not too lose either.

Wonwoo closes his hand around Junhui’s and guides him into the room.

The door remains open behind them.

Junhui steps inside like someone crossing a line that cannot be uncrossed.

They move to the bed.

Wonwoo pulls back the blanket. Junhui sets the pillow down. They climb in without hurry, without stumbling. They lie on their backs, side by side, a narrow space between their bodies.

The room is dark, but faint light from the corridor spills in. Minutes pass. Junhui shifts once. Then again. His breathing is shallow. His muscles do not soften.

Wonwoo listens. Feels the restless energy beside him. He turns his head slightly.

“Would you like me to hold you?” he asks.

Junhui turns his face toward him. His expression is a convergence of emotions. He’s a person standing on the edge of asking for something that could change everything.

Finally, he whispers, “Yes.”

They move slowly. Wonwoo turns onto his side first. Carefully. Giving Junhui time to adjust. Junhui mirrors him. They draw closer by degrees. The space between them narrows until their knees brush lightly, then their thighs, then their torsos.

Wonwoo lifts his arm and slides it behind Junhui’s back. Junhui leans in. Inch by inch. Until his forehead rests briefly against Wonwoo’s shoulder. Until his chest meets Wonwoo’s ribs. Until his ear settles over Wonwoo’s heart.

Junhui exhales.

It shudders once on the way out, like a breath held too long finally released. His shoulders drop. The tension in his spine unwinds. His grip on the pillow loosens, and it falls forgotten between them.

Wonwoo tightens his arms around him. 

Junhui tucks his face into the junction of Wonwoo’s neck and shoulder. His breath brushes skin. Hair clings lightly to Wonwoo’s collarbone.

“You’re alright,” Wonwoo whispers into his hair. “Sleep now.”

Junhui’s breathing evens. Slowly. Gradually. His body sinks into Wonwoo’s hold as if surrendering weight he has carried for years.

Minutes later, he is asleep.

Wonwoo does not move.

He listens to Junhui’s breath. Feels the rise and fall of his chest. The warmth pressed against his ribs. 

Junhui is in his arms. He had made peace with never holding him again. 

Something in Wonwoo’s own chest loosens. A knot he did not know he had been carrying.

He remains awake long into the early hours.

Notes:

This chapter is where Wonwoo quietly crosses a line. On the surface, he is simply following medical instructions and handling logistics — arranging the apartment, planning meals, setting routines, staying physically close. But underneath, he is choosing to reorganise his life around Junhui again. He is aware of the tension this creates: with his family, with expectations, with the version of independence he thought he had. He knows that keeping Junhui close will eventually require confrontation. He simply decides that this is a problem for later.

Emotionally, he shifts from helpless witness to active caretaker, even if he never names it as such. He watches, waits, adjusts, makes space. The tension is there, but for now, he lets all other concerns recede and focuses on one thing only: keeping Junhui safe, healthy, and near.

The pacing remains slow because this is what their lives look like in recovery — careful movements, shared silence, deliberate proximity. The story will pick up pace in the next chapter. For now, they are learning how to breathe in the same space again.

Chapter 8: He was never gone; I had just learned to look elsewhere

Summary:

“Is this another thing that I can ask,” he says, “but you won’t answer?”

Notes:

Hello.
First, apologies for the delay. I’m currently doing a PhD, which means my days are a careful balance of reading, writing, thinking too much, and trying to remain sane. This fic has become what I’d call a productive distraction—something that keeps my mind regulated enough to return to academic work without burning out entirely.

Writing this story is not an escape from thinking (because I think too much all the time, that's my default setting). It’s a way of thinking sideways. So thank you for your patience, and for staying with me while this chapter took the time it needed to exist.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Wonwoo wakes before the light changes.

For a moment, he lies still, orienting himself to the room. The ceiling is unfamiliar at this angle. The curtains are half drawn, letting in a thin band of grey morning. The air is warm in a way it shouldn’t be yet, heavy with another person’s presence. When he shifts his hand slightly, it brushes against fabric, then skin.

Junhui is asleep beside him.

Wonwoo turns his head just enough to look. Junhui lies on his side, facing away, his shoulders relaxed. His breathing is even. One hand is tucked under the pillow, the other resting loosely near his chest. The blanket has slipped, baring the line of his collarbone. His hair curling slightly against the pillowcase.

Wonwoo watches him longer than necessary.

This is not unfamiliar territory, exactly, but it is fragile. He understands that instinctively. Junhui has not pushed him away, but he has also not pulled him closer. The bond, such as it is, exists because Junhui allows it to exist. Wonwoo does not mistake that for permission to move carelessly.

He shifts slowly, easing himself out of bed with deliberate attention to where his weight falls. The floorboard near the door creaks if stepped on too quickly. He avoids it. He takes a step, then pauses, glancing back at the bed.

Junhui stirs slightly as the blanket slips further. Wonwoo steps closer and folds it back over his shoulder, careful not to touch him. Junhui exhales, adjusts his head against the pillow, and settles again. He does not wake.

Wonwoo lets himself breathe.

In the kitchen, the apartment is quiet and orderly. The fridge is stocked the way he asked for it to be. Fresh produce, protein, staples, enough to last several days without thought. He opens it, surveys the contents, closes it again.

He cooks simply. Rice warms in the cooker. Eggs sizzle gently in the pan. He washes and cuts vegetables with methodical care. He is not a confident cook, but he is attentive, and attention has always served him better than skill.

As he plates the food, he listens for movement behind him.

Junhui appears in the doorway without sound, hair rumpled. He leans lightly against the frame, watching Wonwoo for a moment before speaking.

“You didn’t have to prepare food for me,” Junhui says.

Wonwoo turns. “It’s already done.”

Junhui hums softly in acknowledgment. He steps into the kitchen, his movements unguarded in a way that still catches Wonwoo’s attention. 

They eat together at the small table. The food is plain, but there is enough of it. Junhui eats without comment, his posture relaxed, shoulders no longer held with the tension Wonwoo remembers too well. Wonwoo notices the way Junhui reaches for the water glass without hesitation.

These are small things. Wonwoo knows better than to mistake them for declarations. Still, he registers each one carefully, filing them away as evidence of something shifting, something easing.

Halfway through the meal, Junhui glances up.

“I can cook for us,” he says. There is a slight pause before the last part. “If you don’t mind.”

Wonwoo feels the words land with unexpected weight. Cooking implies repetition and planning. A future that extends beyond the next meal. Junhui has never cooked for him before, not even when they were together. Back then, Junhui kept his care light, provisional, as if wary of building habits that might be taken for granted.

“I don’t mind,” Wonwoo says.

It is the simplest answer he can give without lying. What he does not say is that the idea has already begun to settle into him, quiet and persistent, that he is imagining mornings shaped around Junhui’s presence without trying to stop himself.

Junhui nods, as if the matter is settled. He does not smile. He does not retract the offer.

They clear the table together. Their movements overlap naturally, once or twice. Junhui reaches for a plate at the same moment Wonwoo does. Their fingers brush briefly. Junhui does not pull away. He adjusts his grip and continues as if nothing has happened.

Wonwoo notices. He notices everything.

When they are done, Junhui rinses his hands at the sink and reaches for his bag.

“We should go soon,” he says.

Wonwoo agrees. He has already adjusted his sense of time around Junhui’s schedule. He accepts this without question. If this arrangement requires patience, then patience is something he can give. 

As they move back toward the bedroom to gather their things, Wonwoo watches the way Junhui moves through the space now, less guarded than the night before, less rigid in his careful distance. Junhui does not correct Wonwoo’s proximity when he passes behind him in the narrow hallway. He does not comment when Wonwoo hands him his jacket.

These are not concessions. They are permissions granted quietly, one at a time.

Wonwoo understands the difference.

They leave the apartment together, and Wonwoo is aware of the significance of that fact long before either of them acknowledges it.

Junhui walks without hesitation, shoulders relaxed in a way that would have been unthinkable even a few days ago. The distance between them remains small as they move down the corridor and out into the morning air. Wonwoo stays close enough to feel the bond’s steady pull, subtle but present, like a low current he has learned to monitor rather than resist. This is deliberate. The doctor had been clear: proximity stabilises the symptoms, especially now, while the bond is still recalibrating after years of dormancy.

Junhui seems aware of it too. He does not comment on the closeness. He does not flinch from it. 

Outside, the campus-bound streets are already filling. Junhui breathes in deeply as they walk, as if testing his lungs, his balance, his sense of orientation. Wonwoo watches for the signs he has learned to recognise: the slight tightening around the eyes, the way Junhui’s fingers curl when the pressure becomes too much. None of it appears. Junhui’s steps remain even.

They are halfway across the main path when someone calls out.

“Junhui!”

Junhui turns immediately, his expression brightening. “Oh—hey!”

A female student approaches them, smiling broadly, hair pulled back into a loose ponytail, notebook tucked under one arm. She slows when she reaches them, glancing between Junhui and Wonwoo with open interest.

“I thought that was you,” she says to Junhui. “Are you going to History and Society? Apparently Professor Han moved the room again.”

Junhui exhales softly. “It’s Building C, third floor. Seminar room.”

She groans. “You’re a lifesaver.”

Then her gaze shifts fully to Wonwoo. The recognition comes with a brief pause, the kind that follows reputation catching up to reality.

“Oh,” she says, smiling politely. “You’re Jeon Wonwoo, right?”

Wonwoo inclines his head. “Yes.”

She laughs lightly. “I’m Minseo. I’m in the same department as Junhui,” she adds, glancing back at Junhui. 

“Nice to meet you,” Wonwoo says. She grins in return.

 “See you inside?” she says, already stepping backward.

“In a minute,” Junhui replies.

She waves once more and disappears into the crowd, still glancing over her shoulder as if confirming what she has seen.

Junhui resumes walking, the ease in his posture intact. Wonwoo notices that he does not increase the distance between them. If anything, he drifts a fraction closer, as though anchoring himself without thinking about it.

They walk a little farther before Junhui speaks again, more thoughtfully.

“I think it’ll be okay today,” he says. “Just a few hours.”

Wonwoo understands what he means without needing clarification. “If it’s not, you leave.”

Junhui nods. “I will.”

“And you call me,” Wonwoo adds, his tone calm but firm. “If you feel unwell. Dizzy. Disconnected. Anything.”

Junhui looks at him. Not defensively. Just attentive. “I have your number,” he says. “I know.”

“Good.”

They reach the steps leading to Junhui’s building. Junhui stops there, adjusting the strap of his bag, grounding himself in the familiar motion. Students pass around them, some glancing, some lingering, some clearly pretending not to stare.

“You don’t have class today?” Junhui asks.

“No,” Wonwoo replies. “I’ll be in the library. I have some readings I need to get through.”

Junhui considers that for a moment. “Alright. I’ll message you after.”

Wonwoo nods. “Take your time.”

Junhui hesitates, just briefly, then turns toward the building. He doesn’t rush inside. He walks at an unhurried pace, as if trusting that Wonwoo will remain exactly where he said he would be.

Wonwoo watches until Junhui disappears from sight.

Only then does he turn toward the library, carrying with him the quiet awareness that this morning is not a return to normal, but a test. One they are both taking seriously, even if they refuse to say so aloud.

The library is quiet in the way it always is at this hour. Wonwoo takes his usual seat by the window on the second floor, the one with a clear view of the courtyard below. He sets his bag down, pulls out the book he had marked for today’s reading, and opens it to the page he flagged last night.

He reads carefully. Slowly. He underlines a paragraph, then another, though he knows he will have to return to them later. His attention drifts because it refuses to stay isolated from everything else that has already begun rearranging itself around Junhui.

He closes the book after a while and leans back in his chair.

Keeping Junhui close is not just a matter of proximity. Wonwoo understands that with the same clarity he understands the mechanics of the bond itself. Physical closeness stabilises Junhui’s condition, yes, but it cannot be the only thing holding them together. Not when the bond has reawakened after years of being left half-formed, unresolved, sustained by something far more fragile than intention.

They will have to talk.

Not in the careful half-sentences they have been using to coexist so far. They will have to talk about the past, properly, about the things that were left unsaid because silence once seemed like the safer option. There are reasons Wonwoo never gave Junhui, reasons he kept to himself because naming them would have implicated more than just the two of them.

He knows now that was a mistake.

Being with Wonwoo has never meant only being with him. It means his family, their expectations, their scrutiny, the world they inhabit so easily and so completely. It means being seen, evaluated, folded into a structure that does not forgive deviation kindly. Wonwoo had known that even then. It was the reason why he told himself leaving Junhui was an act of protection rather than fear.

But protection, he has learned, is meaningless if it leaves someone alone to bear the consequences.

He thinks of his uncle’s mate.

She had been radiant once. A confident woman. The kind of woman who carried herself as if the world would make room for her because it ought to. Wonwoo remembers her laughter from when he was younger, the way she used to meet his eyes and speak to him directly, never condescending, never distracted. Even in middle school, he had understood admiration when he felt it.

The last time he saw her, years later, she had looked smaller. Not physically, but as if something essential had been drained from her. Her eyes had been sharp with something like resentment, her beauty edged with a bitterness that had nothing to do with age. The bond removal surgery had freed her, everyone said. Given her her independence back.

What it had really done was hollow her out.

Wonwoo had been too young to articulate it then, but he had known pain when he saw it. He knows now what it costs to sever something that was never meant to be cut away.

Junhui deserves better than that. Better than resentment. Better than a future shaped by loss disguised as freedom.

And yet.

Wonwoo presses his fingers lightly against the edge of the desk, grounding himself. Staying with him means asking Junhui to exist within a world that may never fully accept him. It means asking him to endure attention, speculation, the quiet cruelty of high society dressed as concern. Wonwoo cannot pretend otherwise. If Junhui were to resent that one day, if the weight of it were to corrode what is bright and open in him, Wonwoo would have no one to blame but himself.

Still, staying is the only way forward now. The bond has made that unmistakably clear. Severing their relationship did not spare Junhui. Distance did not weaken it. Against all probability, it endured.

Half-bonds do not survive years of separation without intention. They persist only when both parties continue to hold on, consciously or not. Wonwoo knows what he carried. He has never truly let go of Junhui, even when he refused to name what that meant.

What he did not expect, what unsettles him even now, is the realisation that Junhui must have done the same.

The thought sits heavily in his chest.

He exhales slowly and straightens, reopening his book. He forces himself to read another section, to underline another passage, to exist within the familiar structure of academic work. It steadies him enough to think clearly again.

He will stay with Junhui, as long as Junhui allows it. That much is settled.

That means confronting his family, eventually. Not recklessly. Not yet. There is an order to these things, and Wonwoo has never believed in reversing it. He will not drag Junhui into that world before they have spoken honestly to each other. Junhui deserves to know what being with Wonwoo entails before he is asked to endure it.

For now, though, Wonwoo accepts the balance Junhui has set. Ask if you need to. Do not expect answers. Respect what is withheld.

He tells himself he can live with that.

Even as he admits, quietly, that not knowing is already beginning to gnaw at him.

Still, this is the arrangement that keeps Junhui safe. This is the version of staying that Junhui can tolerate. Wonwoo will not destabilise it by demanding more than Junhui has offered.

Isn’t that what matters most?

That he gets to keep Junhui.

Wonwoo closes the book again, this time marking the page with deliberate care. Outside the window, students cross the courtyard in loose clusters, voices drifting upward. Somewhere across campus, Junhui is in a classroom, testing the distance between them, trusting that Wonwoo will remain exactly where he said he would be.

Wonwoo checks his phone. No messages yet.

He sets it face down on the table and waits.

 

Junhui calls just after noon.

Wonwoo has been rereading the same paragraph for the third time when his phone vibrates against the table. He checks the screen, then answers immediately.

“I’m done,” Junhui says. There’s background noise behind his voice. “I’m outside the building.”

“Wait there,” Wonwoo replies. “I’ll find you.”

He is already packing his bag as he speaks.

It takes him less than ten minutes to reach the humanities building. He spots Junhui easily, standing near the steps with his phone in hand, shoulders slightly slumped now that the effort of concentrating through class is over. He looks tired, but steadier than he had been in the morning.

Junhui sees him and lifts his head. He doesn’t wave. He doesn’t smile. He simply straightens and falls into step beside Wonwoo as if that has always been the plan.

“Did it go alright?” Wonwoo asks as they start walking.

Junhui nods. “Yeah. I left halfway through the discussion, but the lecture part was fine.”

“You should’ve left earlier if you needed to.”

Junhui shrugs. “I wanted to try.”

Wonwoo lets that stand. Trying matters. So does knowing when to stop.

They head toward the row of small restaurants just off campus, the ones tucked between convenience stores and stationery shops. Without discussion, Junhui slows near a familiar signboard, the characters faded from years of sun exposure.

They step inside.

The restaurant is narrow, tables packed close together, the smell of oil and spice clinging to the air. It is louder than the library had been, louder than the apartment this morning, but Junhui does not tense. He slides into the booth opposite Wonwoo, sets his bag down at his feet, and reaches for the menu without hesitation.

For a moment, the scene overlays itself with memory.

There was a time when meals like this had felt stolen. Wonwoo remembers choosing Junhui over obligations he could not quite explain away, slipping into places like this between practice sessions, rehearsed excuses waiting on his tongue. Back then, Junhui had laughed freely, leaning across the table to steal bites from Wonwoo’s plate, touching his wrist absentmindedly as he talked.

Wonwoo keeps his gaze on Junhui now, careful not to let the past distort what is in front of him.

Junhui orders quickly. Familiar dishes. Nothing indulgent. When the food arrives, he eats with quiet focus, eyes lowered, movements economical. He does not reach across the table. He does not comment on the taste beyond a soft acknowledgment when the server checks in.

Wonwoo eats as well, though his attention keeps returning to Junhui, to the way he seems to be measuring himself with each bite, gauging how much energy he has left. This closeness is allowed, but it is contained. Junhui keeps it that way.

As Junhui lifts his chopsticks again, his sleeve shifts, pulled back just enough to reveal the inside of his wrist.

Wonwoo sees it immediately.

A string of numbers tattooed to Junhui’s skin, fine-lined and precise.

170922

The date settles into Wonwoo’s awareness without explanation. He does not reach for Junhui’s hand. He does not ask what it means. He commits it to memory instead, the way he does with things that matter but are not yet his to touch.

Junhui notices Wonwoo’s gaze a second later and adjusts his sleeve back into place. The movement is unremarkable, practiced. He does not look up.

Wonwoo looks away.

They finish their meal in silence that is not uncomfortable, but not easy either. When Junhui sets his chopsticks down, he exhales softly, the tension in his shoulders easing just a fraction.

“I’m okay,” he says, as if answering a question Wonwoo hasn’t asked.

Wonwoo nods. “Good.”

Outside, the afternoon light has sharpened, the campus busy again with students moving between classes. They step back into the flow together, Junhui close enough that Wonwoo can feel the bond steady and present, neither strained nor dormant.

It is enough, for now.

But as they walk, the numbers remain with Wonwoo, quiet and insistent, a marker of something Junhui carries alone.

He does not ask. 

They return to the apartment quietly.

Junhui drops his bag by the door and toes his shoes off without bending down properly, as if the effort costs more than it should. He does not head for the bedroom. Instead, he moves toward the living room and sinks onto the sofa, leaning back with his eyes half closed, one hand resting loosely against his thigh.

Wonwoo watches him from the doorway.

The half day apart has left its mark. Wonwoo can see it in the way Junhui’s shoulders slope forward, in the slight delay before he exhales fully, as if his body has been holding itself upright on borrowed time. Being among people, being seen, maintaining coherence without the bond close enough to steady him. It has taken more than Junhui would admit.

Wonwoo sets his bag down and joins him, sitting carefully at the other end of the sofa. He does not crowd him. He leaves the space open, available.

They sit like that for a moment, the quiet stretching comfortably but thin.

“Do you need me to touch you?” Wonwoo asks.

The question is direct. He does not move as he waits for the answer.

Junhui opens his eyes. He looks at Wonwoo, then away again, his jaw tightening slightly before he nods. 

Wonwoo shifts closer.

Their shoulders touch first, the contact light but unmistakable. Junhui exhales, the sound almost inaudible, and allows his weight to lean fractionally toward Wonwoo’s side. Wonwoo waits another beat, then reaches for Junhui’s hand.

He takes it slowly, palm to palm, giving Junhui time to pull away if he chooses to. Junhui doesn’t. His fingers remain loose, pliant, the tension in them easing as Wonwoo’s grip settles.

It is Junhui’s left hand.

Wonwoo notices the tattoo again immediately. The numbers sit stark against his skin, more prominent now in the soft afternoon light. Without lifting Junhui’s hand, without changing his grip, Wonwoo turns it gently, his thumb brushing the inside of Junhui’s wrist.

He traces the ink lightly, once.

Junhui startles.

His fingers twitch, reflex sharp enough to be felt. He tries to pull his hand back, breath catching, but Wonwoo’s hold tightens just enough to stop him, not restraining, simply steady.

Junhui freezes.

Wonwoo keeps his voice low. “Is this another thing that I can ask,” he says, “but you won’t answer?”

Junhui does not look at him. His gaze is fixed somewhere ahead, unfocused. The seconds stretch. Wonwoo does not press. He does not loosen his hold either.

Finally, Junhui hums. A single sound, quiet and resigned, vibrating faintly between them.

Wonwoo nods once. “Okay.”

He releases Junhui’s wrist but keeps their hands together, their fingers still touching. Junhui does not pull away this time. He leans more fully against Wonwoo’s shoulder, eyes closing again, the tension in his body settling into something heavier, more honest.

They sit like that for several moments, the bond steadying, the silence doing work neither of them names.

Then Wonwoo speaks again.

“Will you listen to me, instead?”

Junhui’s eyes open. He turns his head just enough to acknowledge the question.

“Yes,” he says.

Wonwoo inhales slowly.

Wonwoo does not let go of Junhui’s hand when he begins to speak. He keeps his thumb resting lightly against Junhui’s palm, a quiet point of contact, enough to anchor them both.

“There’s something I should tell you,” he says. “About my family.”

Junhui shifts slightly, settling in. He doesn’t look at Wonwoo, but he doesn’t pull away either. He listens.

“My uncle met the woman he loved when he was younger than I am now,” Wonwoo continues. “She wasn’t part of our world. She didn’t grow up the way we did. She was bright. Confident. The kind of person who took up space without asking for permission.”

He pauses, the image still vivid.

“He brought her home once. Not formally. Just to introduce her. She was polite, but not small. She laughed easily. She asked questions. I remember thinking she was… alive in a way that felt rare in our house.”

Wonwoo’s voice remains even, but there is something careful about it now, as if he is placing each memory down gently.

“My family didn’t reject her,” he says. “They wouldn’t. That’s not how they work. They were cordial. Attentive. They made room for her at the table.”

He exhales softly.

“But they didn’t accept her either.”

Junhui’s fingers curl slightly against Wonwoo’s.

“My family isn’t really a family,” Wonwoo goes on. “Not in the way most people mean it. It’s more like an extended web of corporations. Everyone is connected. Everyone is loyal. Feelings aren’t discussed, but obligations are absolute. They’re old money. They have their hands in everything. Finance. Healthcare. Real estate. Media. Politics. But they’re all very lowkey.”

He glances down at their joined hands.

“They don’t open up easily. And they don’t forgive easily either. They can be… cutthroat. It’s necessary, in the world they operate in. Outsiders don’t fit into that space without being reshaped by it.”

There is a brief silence before he adds, more quietly, “It’s stifling. Even for me.”

Junhui shifts again, his shoulder pressing more firmly against Wonwoo’s.

“My uncle was born into it,” Wonwoo says. “Just like I was. He loved her anyway. And she loved him. They bonded.”

Wonwoo swallows.

“It lasted three years.”

Junhui’s breathing slows. Wonwoo looks at Junhui then, just briefly. He lets the silence settle before continuing.

“Four years ago, when my mother made it known that she was aware I had been seeing someone,” Wonwoo says, “she mentioned my uncle in the same conversation.”

Junhui’s head lifts slightly at that.

“She didn’t threaten me,” Wonwoo adds. “She didn’t need to. She just… reminded me of what happens when someone like us makes choices without considering the world we belong to.”

He tightens his grip on Junhui’s hand, not enough to hurt, just enough to be sure he is still there.

“I didn’t want that to happen to us,” he says. “I thought leaving you would prevent it.”

His voice drops, not breaking, but exposed now.

“I was wrong.” 

He falls quiet after that, the weight of what he has said settling between them. 

Wonwoo does not rush to fill the silence. When he speaks again, his voice is quieter, but steadier, as if the act of naming things has settled something in him.

“My uncle used to be… expansive,” he says. “He laughed loudly. He argued for sport. He used to take me out to eat on weekends when my parents were busy and let me order whatever I wanted, then told me not to tell anyone.”

Junhui’s mouth curves faintly at that, almost involuntarily.

“After the bond was severed,” Wonwoo continues, “he started sleeping less. Or too much. It alternated. Some days he couldn’t focus long enough to finish a sentence. Other days he was so sharp it felt like being cut just standing near him.”

Wonwoo’s thumb moves once, absent, against Junhui’s palm.

“He had panic responses that didn’t make sense to anyone else. Crowded rooms. Sudden noises. Smells that reminded him of his ex-wife. He used to stop mid-conversation sometimes, like he’d forgotten where he was. Like his body was looking for something that wasn’t there anymore.”

He exhales slowly.

“The doctors called it post-severance adjustment. As if adjustment implies improvement.”

Junhui’s fingers tighten slightly.

“He learned how to function,” Wonwoo says. “He learned what to say, when to leave, how to manage it. But he lost something. Not just the bond. His curiosity. His ease. The way he used to look forward to things.”

Wonwoo looks down at their hands.

“He doesn’t talk about her. He doesn’t talk about the years they were together. He talks about business. About obligations. About what needs to be done.”

There is a pause before he adds, very softly, “He survived. But he never recovered.”

Wonwoo lets that sit before shifting, carefully, to what he has not yet said.

“When I was with you,” he says, “I knew you lived in a different world than I did.”

Junhui stills.

“You laughed easily. You spoke to people without calculating what they could do for you later. You got excited about small things. Food. Music. Classes. People.” Wonwoo’s voice does not waver. “You were… present in a way that felt rare to me.”

His grip on Junhui’s hand tightens, just slightly.

“I didn’t want you to change,” he says. “Not because I wouldn’t love you if you did. I would have. I know that.”

Junhui turns his head now, looking at him fully.

“But the version of you I fell in love with,” Wonwoo continues, “existed in those moments we stole. The spaces where my family wasn’t watching. Where my name didn’t carry weight. Where you didn’t have to be anything but yourself.”

He swallows.

“I was afraid that if you had to adapt to my world, if you had to harden yourself to survive it, you would lose that.” His voice drops. “And I was afraid that if you lost it… you might not like me anymore.”

The admission lands heavily between them.

“I didn’t trust myself enough to believe that you would stay,” Wonwoo says. “Not if staying meant becoming someone you never wanted to be.”

Junhui’s hand shifts in his, not pulling away, but adjusting, their fingers interlacing briefly before settling again.

“I thought leaving would preserve something,” Wonwoo says. “That it would keep you whole.”

His gaze lifts, meeting Junhui’s.

“I didn’t consider that leaving would force you to endure everything alone.”

He stops there. He does not try to soften it. He does not say he was young, or afraid, or doing his best. He has told Junhui what guided his choice. And what it cost.

The room is quiet again. The bond between them hums low and steady, carrying the weight of what has finally been said.

The afternoon light shifts across the living room, the quiet deepening until it feels almost deliberate. Wonwoo stays where he is, their shoulders still touching, his hand resting open between them. He does not try to reclaim Junhui’s wrist. He does not look at the tattoo again. He waits.

When Junhui finally speaks, his voice is calm. It sounds steady in a way that suggests he has already lived with these thoughts for a long time.

“I knew,” he says.

Wonwoo turns his head slightly.

“I knew I was… an escape,” Junhui continues. He exhales softly, as if adjusting to the weight of the word. “Not in a bad way. I don’t mean it like that.”

He shifts on the sofa, drawing one knee up, grounding himself in the familiar posture.

“I knew that when you were with me, you were somewhere else,” Junhui says. “Away from whatever you had to be out there. All of it.”

Wonwoo’s chest tightens.

“I didn’t mind,” Junhui adds. “I was happy that I could be that for you.”

He pauses, then continues, quieter now.

“Back then, my life was… fine. It wasn’t terrible. It just wasn’t very bright either. Not much made me genuinely happy.” He glances down at their hands, still close, not quite touching. “You did.”

The admission lands without drama.

“But I also knew it wouldn’t last,” Junhui says. There is no bitterness in it. Just acceptance. “Nothing ever really does. Not for me.”

Wonwoo stays silent.

“My dad died when I was young,” Junhui goes on. “My mom remarried. We moved. I didn’t understand the language here. I didn’t understand the people. I just… kept going. Things change all the time. Sometimes they get better. Sometimes they don’t. You learn to adjust.”

He lifts his gaze, meeting Wonwoo’s.

“I knew you would leave,” Junhui says simply. “I just didn’t know when.”

Wonwoo feels the words settle heavily, not as accusation, but as fact.

“I never blamed you,” Junhui says. “I still don’t.”

“I don’t think you were wrong to be afraid,” Junhui continues. “Your world is heavy. I could see that even then. I knew what being with you meant, even if I didn’t have all the details.”

He leans back slightly, then lets his shoulder rest against Wonwoo’s again, the contact deliberate now.

“I chose what we had,” Junhui says. “Knowing it might end. Knowing it probably would.”

Wonwoo swallows.

“I don’t regret it,” Junhui adds. “Not even now.”

They sit like that for a while, the bond humming low between them, something warmer settling into the quiet. 

“I’m not ready to… go back,” Junhui says eventually. “Not like before.”

“I know,” Wonwoo replies.

“But I’m here,” Junhui continues. “And I’m willing to see what’s possible. Slowly.”

Wonwoo nods. “As slow as you need.”

Junhui exhales, the sound lighter than it has been all day. He doesn’t smile, not fully, but something in his posture eases, the careful distance between them finally narrowing.

They are not together again.

But they are no longer standing on opposite sides of the past.

For now, that is enough.

The days that follow arrive quietly, one after another, each similar enough to feel continuous, different enough that Wonwoo learns to tell them apart by Junhui’s energy alone.

They keep choosing the living room. The sofa becomes their shared axis. Junhui leans there when he’s tired. Wonwoo sits there when he wants to be near without asking for more. Sometimes they read. Sometimes Junhui scrolls through his phone while Wonwoo studies, the soft sound of page turns and notification taps filling the space between them.

Junhui still doesn’t initiate touch.

But he no longer flinches from it either.

Wonwoo notices how Junhui positions himself now. Always close enough that their shoulders brush if either of them shifts. Always angled slightly inward. He notices how Junhui’s breathing evens when Wonwoo’s knee presses lightly against his. How exhaustion settles faster when proximity is maintained.

They test this, quietly.

One afternoon, Wonwoo stays at the dining table to finish reading while Junhui moves to the sofa alone. Ten minutes pass. Junhui’s posture tightens almost imperceptibly. His leg bounces once. He exhales, sets his phone down, and stands.

He doesn’t say anything. He simply returns to the sofa Wonwoo had occupied earlier and waits.

Wonwoo closes his book and joins him without comment.

Another day, Junhui insists on going out again. They went grocery shopping.

The store is crowded. It’s late afternoon. Students, families, too many voices overlapping. Wonwoo stays close without hovering. He watches Junhui’s shoulders, the way he tracks movement in his peripheral vision, the way his hand curls once around the strap of the basket.

Minghao texts halfway through.

Minghao: are you alive
Minghao: dinner tomorrow? same place

Junhui replies in without hesitation.

Wonwoo does not read the message. He only notes how Junhui’s mouth softens when he types.

Back in the apartment, Junhui cooks more than once. The first time is careful. The second is easier. By the third evening, he moves through the kitchen like it’s always been his.

Wonwoo stays nearby every time. Leaning against the counter. Sitting at the table. Watching.

He notices how Junhui tastes food and adjusts seasoning in increments. How he pauses occasionally, pressing two fingers briefly to the counter as if recalibrating. How he eats more when Wonwoo eats first.

They eat together without talking much. Silence no longer needs explanation.

Friends come in and out of these days too.

A late dinner with everyone where Junhui sits naturally beside Minghao, leaning in when Minghao speaks softly, laughing under his breath at something Wonwoo doesn’t hear. Wonwoo notices that Junhui doesn’t disappear into Minghao’s space entirely. He keeps Wonwoo in his line of sight. Always.

Soonyoung checks in with Wonwoo afterward, casual as ever.

“You good?” he asks, not prying, just confirming.

Wonwoo nods. “Yeah.”

Soonyoung accepts that answer without demanding more.

Time stretches.

By the fourth day, Junhui’s exhaustion hits earlier. He curls up on the sofa without comment, knees drawn in, head tilted back against the cushion. Wonwoo sits beside him, close enough that their thighs touch.

Junhui doesn’t ask.

Wonwoo reaches out and lets his fingers rest against Junhui’s wrist, light, steady.

Junhui exhales and lets his eyes close.

This is what it becomes. Just two people learning the shape of shared survival. Wonwoo thinks, dimly, that this is the most dangerous part. Because it feels sustainable.

The nights take longer to settle than the days.

From the first night onward, the bed is no longer a question. It is simply where they sleep. Junhui takes the side closer to the door. Wonwoo takes the other, close enough that their shoulders brush if either of them turns. The distance is small, but deliberate. Neither of them crosses it without reason.

The first few nights, Junhui falls asleep quickly. Wonwoo notices this. The way Junhui’s breathing deepens within minutes, as if his body has been waiting all day for permission to stop holding itself together. He sleeps curled slightly inward, one arm tucked close to his chest, knees drawn up just enough to protect his core.

Wonwoo stays awake longer. He listens to Junhui’s breathing. He tracks the subtle shifts of his weight. He learns how much space Junhui needs to feel secure without feeling crowded.

One night, Junhui turns in his sleep.

It’s slow, unintentional. His shoulder presses lightly against Wonwoo’s chest. He exhales, deeper than before, and stays there.

Wonwoo does not move.

He does not pull Junhui closer, even though his body wants to. He does not shift away either. He lets the contact exist exactly as it is, careful not to assign meaning Junhui has not offered.

In the morning, Junhui wakes first.

He lies still for several seconds, as if taking inventory. Then he eases himself away, quietly, efficiently, leaving the bed without comment. Wonwoo watches him go, noting the absence without reaching for it.

This becomes their rhythm.

They sleep together every night. Sometimes Junhui drifts closer. Sometimes he doesn’t. Sometimes his hand ends up resting near Wonwoo’s wrist, close enough that Wonwoo can feel the heat but not the weight.

Wonwoo never initiates.

He waits.

Days pass like this.

Junhui’s exhaustion ebbs and flows. Some mornings he moves easily, already thinking about food, classes, plans. Other days he lingers at the edge of the bed, shoulders heavy, eyes unfocused, the effort of being awake clearly costing him something.

On those days, Wonwoo adjusts everything else around him.

He cooks. He cancels his own plans without comment. He sits where Junhui can see him. He keeps the apartment quiet.

At night, Junhui begins to orient toward him more deliberately. Just turning so that his back rests against Wonwoo’s chest, close enough that Wonwoo can feel the slow rise and fall of his breathing through the thin barrier of clothing.

The first time it happens while Junhui is awake, Wonwoo freezes.

Junhui settles there, spine aligned with Wonwoo’s, head tilted slightly forward. His voice is low, almost careless.

“This is okay,” he says. It’s not a question. A statement.

Wonwoo swallows. “Okay.”

He does not move his arms. He does not pull Junhui closer. He lets Junhui decide how much contact is enough.

Junhui sleeps like that for the rest of the night.

In the morning, he doesn’t pull away immediately.

That is new.

Wonwoo notices everything.

He notices how Junhui’s breathing is steadier now, even during the day. How his appetite returns in small but consistent ways. How the sharp edge of vigilance dulls just enough that Junhui can sit in silence without bracing himself.

He also notices what doesn’t change.

Junhui still doesn’t initiate touch while awake. He doesn’t reach for Wonwoo’s hand unless it’s necessary. He doesn’t lean in unless he’s tired.  

Wonwoo accepts this. 

By the end of the week, sharing a bed no longer feels like a concession or a treatment plan. It feels… normal. It doesn’t feel safe or permanent. But it’s real.

Wonwoo lies awake one night, Junhui warm against his side, and thinks that this quiet, this restrained closeness, might be the most honest thing they have ever shared.

The clinic smells faintly of disinfectant and citrus, the air cool enough that Junhui keeps his jacket on even after they sit. The room is small, utilitarian, a desk pushed against one wall, examination bed folded neatly into the other. Nothing about it invites lingering.

Wonwoo takes the chair closest to Junhui without thinking. Their knees brush when he sits. Junhui doesn’t move away.

The doctor enters a moment later, tablet in hand, expression neutral but attentive. She greets them both, then turns her attention to Junhui first.

“How have you been feeling since we last met?” she asks.

Junhui considers the question carefully. “Better,” he says. “More stable.”

“Any dissociative episodes?”

Junhui shakes his head. “Not since I moved in with him.”

The doctor notes this down and looks at Wonwoo. “And you?”

Wonwoo answers without hesitation. “His sleep has improved. Appetite too. He still fatigues easily, but the recovery time is shorter.”

Junhui glances at him briefly, then looks away again.

The doctor hums softly, scrolling. “And how about you?” she asks Wonwoo more directly. “Have you noticed any changes since the bond reactivated?”

Wonwoo pauses.

“I’m more aware of it,” he says finally. “Of him. Of the bond.”

The doctor looks up, attentive.

“It’s… difficult to separate what’s new from what I was suppressing before,” Wonwoo continues. His voice remains steady, but there is care in how he chooses each word. “In the past, I forced myself not to dwell on thoughts about Junhui. I thought distance was safer.”

Junhui’s posture stills.

“Now that the bond is active again,” Wonwoo says, “I notice things more. Physical proximity affects me. Separation registers faster. But it doesn’t feel distressing. Just… present.”

The doctor nods slowly. “That’s consistent with re-sensitisation after prolonged dormancy. Suppression can blunt awareness, but it doesn’t eliminate the bond’s underlying mechanisms.”

She makes another note, then gestures toward the examination bed. “We’ll do a quick check.”

Junhui follows instructions easily, sleeve pushed up, sensors placed and removed with efficient precision. Wonwoo watches closely, cataloguing every reaction, every breath. Junhui remains steady throughout.

When it’s done, the doctor steps back, folding her arms loosely.

“The bond has stabilised significantly,” she says. “It’s no longer fluctuating the way it was when you first came in. Your vitals are consistent with someone whose bond is active, though still incomplete.”

Junhui’s posture tightens slightly.

“This kind of half-formed bond can’t remain in limbo indefinitely,” the doctor continues. “The body will eventually demand resolution. Either completion or severance. Prolonged suspension increases the risk of chronic symptoms.”

She looks between them now, deliberately.

“So,” she says, “what are you planning to do next?”

The question hangs in the air, heavier than the clinical tone suggests.

Wonwoo feels Junhui shift beside him. He waits, letting Junhui decide who will speak.

Junhui clears his throat. “We’re… taking things slowly.”

The doctor nods, acknowledging without judgment. “That’s reasonable. But it’s not a long-term strategy.”

Silence settles again.

Junhui’s fingers curl briefly in his lap. Then he turns his head toward Wonwoo.

“Can you wait outside for a bit?” he asks. His voice is even, but there’s something deliberate in it. “I need to confirm something with the doctor. In private.”

Wonwoo doesn’t ask what.

He studies Junhui’s face for a moment, searching for signs of distress or hesitation. He finds none. Just resolve.

“Okay,” he says.

He stands, collects his jacket, and pauses briefly at the door. Junhui doesn’t look at him this time, but he doesn’t pull away either when Wonwoo’s hand brushes lightly against the back of his chair.

“I’ll be right outside,” Wonwoo says.

Junhui nods. “Okay.”

Wonwoo steps into the hallway, the door closing softly behind him.

Wonwoo waits.

 

About ten minutes later, the door opens softly.

Wonwoo looks up immediately.

Junhui steps out first. His posture is composed, his expression carefully neutral, but there is a new steadiness to him that Wonwoo registers at once. Like something settled, carried deliberately.

The doctor follows a moment later.

“Everything alright?” Wonwoo asks, already on his feet.

Junhui nods. “Yeah.”

The answer is quick. Wonwoo doesn’t comment on it, but his attention sharpens all the same.

The doctor addresses them both, her tone clinical, even. “From a physiological standpoint, the bond is continuing to stabilise. Proximity is clearly beneficial. For now, maintain your current arrangements and monitor symptoms.”

Wonwoo nods. “And longer term?”

The doctor pauses, letting the weight of the question exist. “You don’t need to decide anything today. We’ll reassess.”

Junhui doesn’t look at her. His gaze is fixed ahead, as if he has already moved past the appointment itself.

They leave together.

The hallway hums quietly, fluorescent lights casting a flat, colourless glow. Wonwoo falls into step beside Junhui, close but careful. Junhui keeps his hands in his pockets, shoulders relaxed but guarded in a way that feels intentional rather than defensive.

“You okay?” Wonwoo asks.

Junhui nods again. “Just tired.”

Wonwoo accepts the answer without pressing, though he feels the difference immediately. Junhui isn’t frayed. If anything, he’s too composed, as if something has resolved internally that hasn’t yet reached the surface.

Outside, Junhui pauses at the top of the steps, drawing in a deep breath. He looks out at the street, then back at Wonwoo.

“Can we just go home?” he asks.

“Yes,” Wonwoo says. There is no hesitation.

They walk back in silence. Junhui stays close this time, their arms brushing with each step. Wonwoo lets the contact exist, attentive to it without claiming it.

Inside the apartment, Junhui slips off his jacket and leaves it draped over the chair. He doesn’t retreat to his room. Instead, he goes straight to the living room and sits on the sofa, exhaustion finally allowed to show now that the effort of being functional is over.

Wonwoo joins him a moment later.

They sit without touching at first, the familiar closeness hovering just short of contact. Then Junhui leans sideways, resting his head against Wonwoo’s shoulder. The movement is deliberate. 

Wonwoo stays still, letting Junhui set the terms.

Minutes pass. Junhui’s breathing evens. The room fills with the low hum of the bond, steady and present.

Then Junhui shifts.

He straightens slightly and turns his head, looking at Wonwoo from close range. His expression is open in a way Wonwoo hasn’t seen since before the separation. Not vulnerable. Intent.

“Do you want to hold me?” Junhui asks.

The wording lands precisely.

Wonwoo hears it for what it is. It’s not a request for support. It’s a question aimed squarely at him.

He doesn’t answer immediately.

He looks at Junhui, really looks. The careful neutrality. The way Junhui has left room for refusal without preparing himself for rejection. Wonwoo understands, suddenly and clearly, what is being asked.

Not will you take responsibility.
Not will you stay because you should.
But do you still want me.

“Yes,” Wonwoo says. The word is quiet, but unambiguous. “I do.”

He moves slowly, deliberately, giving Junhui time to withdraw if he chooses to. He wraps his arm around Junhui’s shoulders and draws him in.

Junhui exhales as soon as the contact completes, the sound leaving him like something he’s been holding back for days. He shifts closer, settling fully into Wonwoo’s chest, forehead resting just below his ear.

Wonwoo adjusts instinctively, one hand coming to rest flat against Junhui’s back. He doesn’t stroke. He doesn’t soothe. He holds him the way someone holds what they’ve chosen, quiet but sure.

Junhui’s hand rises slowly, fingers curling into Wonwoo’s shirt, anchoring himself there. Not clinging. Confirming.

They stay like that, the bond humming low and steady between them.

Junhui doesn’t move away. He doesn’t tighten his grip either. He seems to be measuring his own weight against Wonwoo’s chest, testing whether it’s still allowed.

“I didn’t… fall apart,” he says eventually. His voice is low, careful. “After you left.”

Wonwoo doesn’t respond. He knows better than to.

“I mean, I wasn’t fine,” Junhui adds. “But I survived. I always do.”

His fingers shift against Wonwoo’s shirt, grounding him.

“At first, I thought about you all the time,” he says. “Not in a dramatic way. Just… small things. I’d see something and think, Wonwoo would like this. Or he’d say something annoying about this.” There’s the faintest hint of a smile in his voice. “I hated that.”

Wonwoo’s chest tightens, but he stays quiet.

“Then it got quieter,” Junhui continues. “I stopped expecting you to show up in my thoughts every day. But you never really left either. You were just… there. In the background.”

He exhales.

“I used to hope you were okay. Which sounds stupid, because of course you were. You always are.” His tone shifts slightly, something wry cutting through. “I knew you’d land on your feet. I knew you’d do well.”

Wonwoo swallows.

“When I started university,” Junhui says, “it was later than everyone else.”

Wonwoo stills slightly.

“I’d already learned how not to rush things by then,” Junhui continues. “So when I heard your name again, I wasn’t expecting it to mean anything.”

His fingers curl briefly, then relax.

“I found out you were here, in the same university.” He lets out a quiet breath. “Your major wasn’t a surprise at all. I remember thinking, of course. Of course you’d choose something like that.”

Wonwoo’s hand presses more firmly against Junhui’s back, just for a moment.

“I told myself it didn’t matter,” Junhui says. “That we didn’t have anything to do with each other anymore. I didn’t let myself be… hopeful.”

He pauses.

“And then I heard you were in the military.”

Wonwoo’s breathing shifts, almost imperceptibly.

“I was relieved,” Junhui admits. “Because it meant I wouldn’t accidentally run into you. At least not for a while.”

He hesitates, then adds more quietly, “But I worried too. I wondered how you were doing. Whether you were eating properly. Whether you were okay.”

The words are simple. They land anyway.

“I survived all those years without you,” Junhui says. “I really did.”

He shifts then, pulling back just enough to look at Wonwoo, eyes open and clear now.

“But the moment you were suddenly in the same space again,” he continues, “my body just… did something ridiculous. Like it had been waiting for permission this whole time.”

Wonwoo meets his gaze, expression open, unguarded.

“I know it doesn’t make sense,” Junhui says. “But it’s like my body recognised you before I could stop it.”

Wonwoo lifts his hand, thumb brushing once, carefully, against Junhui’s shoulder. 

“It’s not ridiculous,” he says quietly.

Junhui searches his face for a moment, then lets himself lean back into Wonwoo’s chest again, the tension easing slightly, as if the words have finally landed somewhere safe.

“I just needed you to know that,” Junhui murmurs. “That I wasn’t waiting. I was living. And somehow… I still ended up here.”

Wonwoo lowers his head, resting his cheek against Junhui’s hair.

“I know,” he says again. And this time, it carries everything he hasn’t said yet.

They stay quiet for a few more moments after Junhui finishes speaking.

Wonwoo doesn’t rush to fill the space. He keeps his arm around Junhui, steady, letting the weight of what Junhui has said settle fully before he adds anything of his own. He feels Junhui’s breathing even out again, feels the way his body has relaxed now that the words are no longer trapped inside him.

Then Wonwoo speaks.

“I didn’t survive the way you did,” he says quietly.

Junhui stills, just a little.

“I functioned,” Wonwoo continues. His voice is calm, almost clinical, the way it gets when he’s being precise. “I did what I was supposed to do. I went to class. I studied. I did well. I slept. I ate. From the outside, everything looked… fine.”

His hand presses more firmly against Junhui’s back, not to pull him closer, but to anchor himself as much as Junhui.

“But I wasn’t living,” he says. “Not really.”

Junhui tilts his head slightly, listening.

“I knew I loved you,” Wonwoo says. “That part didn’t change. What changed was how much I understood it.” He exhales slowly. “That took time. It was gradual. It happened after you were already gone.”

He doesn’t try to soften that.

“I realised how much you meant to me in all the spaces you weren’t in anymore,” Wonwoo continues. “In the quiet. In the routines. In the things that didn’t make sense without you.”

Junhui’s fingers tighten briefly in his shirt.

“Some days were manageable,” Wonwoo says. “Other days took everything I had just to… not think about you.”

He gives a quiet, almost humourless huff of breath. “Concentrating on not thinking about you turned out to be a full-time job.”

“University had been the hardest part. I kept wondering where you were studying,” he says. “What subject. Who you were with. Whether you liked it there. Whether you were happy.” His voice remains even, but the effort behind it shows. “I’d sit in lectures and realise I hadn’t heard a word for ten minutes because I was trying not to imagine you in some other classroom.”

He swallows.

“I was balancing the workload, keeping my grades up, making sure I looked… sane. Healthy.” He lets the word hang. “There were days I thought I was losing my grip, just trying to keep all of that contained.”

Junhui shifts closer, instinctively, his forehead brushing Wonwoo’s collarbone.

“I chose it,” Wonwoo says, before Junhui can say anything. “I know that. Leaving was my decision. So I decided to live with it.”

A beat.

“That’s part of why I enlisted,” he admits. “I thought it would make things simpler. That if someone else made the choices for me, if everything was structured and external, I wouldn’t have to keep fighting myself.”

He exhales, long and controlled.

“It helped, in a way. There was no space to think. No room to wonder. Just orders. Schedules. Physical exhaustion.” His thumb moves once against Junhui’s back. “It quieted things.”

Junhui lifts his head slightly, eyes searching Wonwoo’s face.

“And then I came back,” Wonwoo says.

His voice shifts then. Not softer. Just more exposed.

“And on my first day back,” he continues, “I heard your name.”

Junhui’s breath catches, almost inaudibly.

“I wasn’t looking for you,” Wonwoo says. “I didn’t think I had the right to.” He lets out a slow breath. “But the moment I heard it, everything I’d been holding in place… moved.”

He meets Junhui’s gaze now, fully.

“I realised I never really learned how to exist without you,” Wonwoo says. “I just learned how to endure it.”

Junhui’s hand comes up, resting flat against Wonwoo’s chest, right over his heartbeat. 

Wonwoo covers it with his own, holding it there.

“I’m not telling you this because I expect anything,” he adds quietly. “I chose the distance. I chose to live with it.”

His gaze doesn’t waver.

“I just didn’t want you to think you were the only one who carried something all those years.”

Junhui looks at him for a long moment, eyes dark and searching, then slowly leans back into his chest again.

They stay like that, bodies aligned, breaths slowly synchronising.

Two people who survived in very different ways.

And finally, finally, said it out loud.

They stay like that for a long moment after Wonwoo finishes speaking.

Junhui’s hand is still on his chest, palm spread flat, as if confirming that the heartbeat underneath is real. Wonwoo keeps his own hand over it, not pressing, not guiding. Just there.

Junhui doesn’t pull away.

Instead, he shifts. Slowly. Deliberately.

He leans back just enough to look up at Wonwoo. Close enough now that Wonwoo can see the slight redness around his eyes, the way his mouth is set, not tense but thoughtful. As if he’s checking something one last time before deciding.

Wonwoo doesn’t move. He lets Junhui have the space to choose.

Junhui lifts his head a fraction more. Their faces are close enough that Wonwoo can feel his breath, warm and steady. Junhui hesitates there, suspended, giving Wonwoo time to stop him if he wants to.

Wonwoo doesn’t.

Junhui leans in.

The kiss is soft. Careful. Almost tentative. His lips brush Wonwoo’s, barely there at first, as if testing whether the contact will hold or collapse. Wonwoo freezes for half a heartbeat, then responds, just as gently, meeting Junhui where he is rather than pulling him closer.

Junhui exhales against his mouth, a sound that feels like relief more than desire. He presses in again, slightly firmer this time, enough to make the kiss real without demanding anything more from it.

Wonwoo’s hand tightens at Junhui’s back, just a little. 

They part slowly, foreheads still close, breaths mingling.

Junhui doesn’t smile. He doesn’t need to. Something in his expression has eased, settled into certainty rather than hope.

“So,” he murmurs, voice quiet but clear. “That’s still there.”

Wonwoo’s mouth curves, just faintly. “It never left.”

 

Notes:

This chapter ended up unfolding much more slowly than I first planned, and at some point I realised that the slowness was the point.

I kept thinking about what it actually looks like when two people come back together without drama or grand declarations. Just logistics, proximity, shared space. Mornings. Food. Walking to campus. Sitting on the same sofa because it’s the easiest place to be near each other. For Wonwoo, love shows up as attention—watching, adjusting, quietly planning around Junhui without ever naming it as care. For Junhui, the shift is subtler but just as real. He stops resisting closeness, then starts choosing it, one small permission at a time.

The chapter moves the way their relationship does right now: cautious, grounded, very embodied. The bond helps stabilise things, but it doesn’t make decisions for them. What matters are the moments where Junhui tests whether Wonwoo’s love is still there, separate from obligation or biology, and Wonwoo answers without trying to rush or claim more than Junhui is ready to give.

By the time they reach the doctor’s appointment and what comes after, the direction is already set. Junhui knows what he wants. What he needs then isn’t reassurance about the bond, but confirmation about Wonwoo. The question “Do you want to hold me?” and the kiss that follows are quiet, but they’re decisive. That’s the moment where they’re back together for me, without fanfare, and without pretending the years in between don’t exist.

At the same time, this chapter is very aware of what it doesn’t say. There are still four years Junhui hasn’t opened yet. There are losses that haven’t entered the room. Being back together doesn’t resolve those things; it just creates a space where they might eventually be faced.

I wanted the chapter to land there. With the sense that something has shifted into place, even as a lot remains unspoken.

Thank you for staying.