Heyo! So I'm a new writer on this platform! I hope you enjoy my works! I write a lot of Kagehina but then again you can ask me what all fandoms I'm in đđđ
I'm a minor so I write SFW only NO NSFW
pairing: dad!seokjin x absent mom!reader (or not? ohoho) warnings: angst (of course); fluff; mentions of financial issues; allusions to su!cidal thoughts; mentions of sickness/illness (not serious); mentions of cigarettes and alcohol; a scene in a hospital/healthcare setting; pregnancy; mentions of the korean postal service written by someone who has never used the korean postal service word count: 7.0k note: this really just ended up being a love letter to the korean countryside⌠to which the resolution of this story is incidental, oops. this was originally just meant to be a two-shot; i had no plans to reconcile this couple at first, because i felt okay leaving their story open-ended. but by popular demand (i.e., the 2-3 of you who directly asked lol), iâve brought them back! disclaimer: this ending may be a little too simple for some, but i literally could not put them through any more angst lmfao
part one | part two
âÂ
The letter arrives, and to Seokjin, it feels weightless in his hand, a hope waiting to be shatteredâa delicate and fragile thing in an envelope no bigger than a paperback.
These days, this is what passes for a routine: He puts his daughter to bed, reads her to sleep with a bedtime story, then waits for the sitter to arrive. Sometimes Hyejin will stir before then, will demand his attention and presence a little longer, but these nights are becoming increasingly rare. She needs him less and less, something he tries not to take personally.
In the thirty minutes it takes the sitter to get to his apartment, he sits at the kitchen counter and takes care of things, the excruciatingly mindless tasks that make up adulthood. He pays his bills, renews his auto insurance, sorts through his credit card statements, orders toilet paper and hand soap. He saves the paper mail for last, pulling the catch-all basket across the counter and shoving his laptop aside.
He doesnât know when checking the mail became such an unpleasant part of his evening. If he had to guess, itâs probably around the time you left. The mail delivered a lot of difficult things back then: automated alerts that your name had been removed from the joint bank account; boilerplate notifications from the police station that there were no updates on your case; school forms that asked for only one parentâs signature.Â
The postman never brought missives from you. Any sign that you were still out there, any hint that you still cared for him and Hyejin.
But time heals wounds, and the ache has simmered down somewhat by the time he drops down tonight in his usual spot. He rubs a sore spot above his eyebrow. The day hasnât been a good oneâhe had to postpone two important development meetings to pick up a feverish Hyejin from school in the middle of the day, and spent the better part of the afternoon convincing her to take cough syrup and calling the doctor. A dull headache pounds between his strained eyes as he sifts through the overflowing basket.
An ad for a new supermarket nearby, coupons for pizza delivery, a plea to subscribe to the local paper. He sets these aside. And then his eyes land on the letter.
Itâs your handwriting. The same hand that filled out all of Hyejinâs school forms, left him love notes on the fridge and drafted personalized thank-you notes to your wedding guests. He marvels at the rounded, sloping curves and sharp corners in your characters. Thereâs no return address.
Before he can think about it any longer, he slips his finger under the flap, tears it open, and slides out the thin piece of paper inside. His hands shake as he unfolds it and presses it flat against the granite.
Dearest Seokjin,
Iâm sorry.
Maybe youâve moved on. Maybe this letter is unwelcome. But I have so many things to apologize for.
How are you? How is Hyejin? Is our little girl doing well? Are you healthy? Maybe itâs meaningless to ask these questions when I canât ask you for a response.
Iâm writing because Iâve missed you, and I am so sorry for leaving the way I did. I want you to know that it wasnât easy for me to leave, and it didnât feel like much of a choice. I know this means nothing to you nowâin fact, reading this may hurt you more. But know that I continue to love you, forever, always. I think of you and Hyejin often.
I donât know if or when I can return. I wonât ask you to wait for me. But please know that I didnât leave easily. My heart remains with you.
Itâs not signedâit doesnât need to be. Seokjin would recognize your script anywhere.
A thousand emotions sear through his chest, all at once. Anger. Denial. Grief. Panic. Back to rage, and then just an immutable sorrow that lodges deep in his sternum and turns his mind to static.
He flips the envelope and letter around in his hands, unsure what he might be looking for. And then he sees itâa postal hub, crookedly printed into the corner. Nearly faded, but distinctly thereâand legible.
The second the sitter arrives, he bolts out the door, keys in hand.
â
It only occurs to him once heâs well into the countryside that he has no idea where to start looking.
He has the name of the postal hub, yes, but this particular hub centers at least twenty spokes, at least twenty villages in this area. He canât tell if itâs better or worse that itâs in the middle of the countryside. Fewer places to look, he supposes, but everything is so dispersed here, at least fifteen minutes of driving between each cluster of buildings, through narrow bridges over rice paddies, dirt roads cutting through patches of arable land. Even at night, the white humps of greenhouses breach the darkness.
He drums his fingers on the steering wheel. He doesnât play music to fill the silence.
Heâll stop at three villages tonight, he decides as he comes up on the first one, his tires crunching on the unpaved path. He sees a sign for a kalguksu restaurant, a worn-down convenience store, a handful of grizzled old men drinking and smoking on plastic chairs outside of it. This must be the equivalent of their town square, an intersection of two roads lit dimly by grimy street lamps and interior lights from the establishments surrounding it. The men look up as he approaches.
It occurs to him that he looks exactly like the type of person they wouldnât welcome easilyâbroad-shouldered and scrubbed clean, still in his dress shirt and pants from work, emerging from a car that isnât exorbitantly fancy but pricey nonethelessâbut itâs too late now. He bows politely to them at a distance, and they incline their heads back, eyeing him warily.
âSo sorry to bother you,â he begins, voice wavering. He pulls out the photo of you heâs kept in his wallet for years, worn around the edges but still clear. A solo shot of you on your wedding day, smiling brightly, so radiant that Seokjinâs heart still skips a beat at the sight. He hands it to the man nearestâthe man puts it right up to his face, peers at it over the rims of his glasses. âIâm looking for my wife. Have you seen her?â
âHey, Hyunjin-ah, doesnât she look likeâŚ.â The man pauses to think, puffing on his cigarette, and passes the photo to his friend on the left. âAh, shit, why canât I remember where Iâve seen her?â
Seokjinâs breath hitches as the photo gets passed around the circle of four, past the glowing ends of cigarettes and tanned knees hiked up to chests. A foolish lightness glimmers in the center of his sternum, one he fights like hell to tamp down. He doesnât expect to find you tonight. Since when has life been that simple?
The man referred to as Hyunjin tips his chin down to his chest and grunts at the photo. âThat girl... Youngja introduced her once. Canât remember where she works.â
The lightness blooms a little brighter. Seokjin swallows the cool night air, fighting to keep his voice at a normal volume. âSo⌠sheâs here?â
The man sitting closest holds out the photo and brings his foot back down to the wooden plank below, sighing heavily. âYoung man, come here.â
Seokjin does as asked, taking a tentative step forward, taking back your image. The manâs eyes grow unexpectedly tender, fond. This close, he can see the sunspots peppering the manâs face, deep grooves of exhaustion and stress parting his forehead.Â
âSon, if she left you, she wonât return unless she wants to. Thereâs no use in bringing her home. Sheâll just find a way to leave again.â The man pulls his mouth into a thin, knowing line, a joyless smile meant to placate. Seokjin closes his eyes in an attempt to stifle the protest swelling inside him.
The man doesnât know, Seokjin tells himself. He doesnât know you, doesnât know him, doesnât know anything. Heâs just old, bored. Convinced he has wisdom to impart from his advanced age.
âThank you,â Seokjin chokes out, turning on his heel and heading back to the car.
The old man might be right, he concedes to himself as he backs out of the narrow space, cutting the wheel with one hand, but Seokjin sure as hell wonât stop until he finds you.
Not when heâs this close.
â
At this hour, an impenetrable silence permeates the rest of the village. Seokjinâs headlights offer the only illumination on the roads. Itâs not as if the town is stuck in the Joseon Dynastyâhe spots flashes of smart TVs through open windows, newer-model cars parked with well-loved farming trucks flecked with rust. But itâs quiet, a kind of quiet he couldnât find in Seoul even if he tried. He likes it: the sound of cicadas, the thick and earthy scent of irrigated dirt and fresh greenery.Â
Heâs not sure where heâs heading, just letting his car navigate the roads aimlessly. The few businesses he comes across have shuttered for the night: grocery stores, a small cafe, restaurants specializing in single dishes. As he drives, easing the car over a particularly rough patch, the manâs words ring in his ears.
Sheâll just find a way to leave again.
He shakes his head, gripping the wheel.
You wonât, heâs convinced. Your letter lies open-faced on the passenger seatâhe turns the wheel to the right, stopping in front of an old house, and parks, bumping on the overhead light so he can read your words again.
Know that I didnât leave easily.
I donât know if or when I can return.
All he has to do is find you, and youâll come home with him, and his world will be righted again, placed back on its axis, continue to spin as it should. You wonât leave, because you love him too much to do it again.
Heâs wondered about the reasons why youâve left, of course, contemplating every possibility. There wasnât much else to do on his long drives on Koreaâs network of highways, in the dead of night with no one else on the road, no one buckled into his passenger seat. In the strained, muffled quiet of his softly humming car, he thought only of you.
He has his suspicions: a family matter seemed the most likely culprit. He thinks now he should have pried further, earlier, perhaps tried to get you to open up about your past. You only gave him the barest of details, just enough for him to know that theyâd mistreated you and that you were thoroughly uninterested in reconciliation. Even now, the sight of your pained and watery eyes as you told him heâd never get to meet your family sends a knife twisting in his stomach. He wants to find the people who made you feel inadequate, unsupported, alone. He wants to make them pay.
He just canât imagine what would be terrible enough to make you leave behind your daughter.Â
He runs a distressed hand through his hair and traces the strokes of his own name at the top of the page. He sets the letter down. Perhaps, if he keeps drivingâ
Tap tap tap. He nearly jumps out of his skin, knocking his head against the ceiling of the car. Wincing, he turns to the right.Â
An older womanâperhaps in her late fifties, early sixtiesâstares at him from the other side of the glass, wearing a floral nightdress and thick parka. She jabs a finger downward, indicating he should roll down his window.
Maybe he shouldnât be interacting with so many total strangers tonight, people who could easily rob or dismember or maim him, but oddly enough, this serene and remote town inspires an indescribable trust. An ill-advised one, probably. But he cracks open the window anyway, rubbing at his throbbing scalp.
âWhy are you parked in front of my house at this hour, you city slicker?â she demands. Her voice emerges loud, brash, but in a way that suggests stern affection, dry but fierce love. It reminds him of his mother.
Seokjin wordlessly hands the photo to her across the passenger seat. She takes it, squints down at it. âI was wondering if youâve seen this woman.âÂ
The womanâs eyes flicker with somethingâsomething that sends another shot of light crackling through him, a feeling as blurry as a dream. âAnd what if I have? Youâre going to get off my property? Stop crushing my plants under those tires of yours, hmm?â She snorts at the look on Seokjinâs face. âI canât just give out information about people, kid. I donât know who you are, what you might do to this womanââ
âSheâs my wife.â
The woman raises an eyebrow. âAnyone could roll through here in their fancy little car and say that. You wonât get more out of me.â
Seokjin takes a deep breathâat once grateful for the womanâs discretion, relieved to know that at least someone around here cares about your safety, and frustrated that she wonât divulge anything. âThe photo. Itâs a wedding photo. Our wedding.â He thrusts the letter in her direction, too, for good measure. âShe wrote me. Sheâs here, isnât she?â He swallows, blinking back the tears that swell without warning. âPlease. Please, I need to find her. IâIâm so close.â
The woman skims the letter, then looks up at him with an unreadable expression for a moment. âWhy donât you come inside, for some tea,â she says finally. âI think youâll need to calm down a bit before going anywhere.â
â
The inside of the womanâs house glows golden from incandescent light bulbs, stuffed with items that remind him of his childhoodâwell-loved wooden tables low to the floor, seat cushions deflated from overuse, walls paneled in stained wood. He bows in gratitude as the woman offers him one of the cushions, right where the TV displays a rerun of a drama heâs already seen.
The living room opens up into the kitchenâSeokjin watches as the woman puts an electric kettle on. He's wondering why this woman trusts him enough to let him into her home, and then she says, so quietly he can barely hear it, âShe is here. The woman youâre looking for.â
He sits up straighter, alerted by this admission, fingers curling against the edge of the table. âWhere?â
Instead of answering him, she just keeps talking, hands moving briskly to tear open packets of barley and set out floral-print mugs. Her words come out soft, slurred, like she isnât thinking very much about them at all. He hangs onto every one, nudging the volume down on the remote so he wonât miss a thing.
âShe came a while ago. Small thing, pale. A little peaky, right?â
Thinking back, he had noticed youâd lost a lot of weight just before you left. Heâd chalked it up to running around after Hyejin, not having enough time to eat while watching herâheâd always reminded you to eat breakfast before he had to leave for work, tried to cook for you as much as possible when he got home. He swallows back the belated guilt, jaw working.
âShe wanted a job, and a place to stay. Those things arenât easy to come by, around here. If youâre not a farmer, or related to one, not many empty beds, you know? Not many places to work, either. But I felt bad for her. I set her up at the cafe, found her an apartment.â
Seokjin can barely stand to hear the words, the history that he doesnât know. Enough, he wants to shout. Does it matter why you left? Does it matter how you came to be here?Â
It does, he realizes as the woman continues. Everything heâs missed in the intervening monthsâhe needs to hear it. He needs to know what youâve been through before he sees you again.
âHow much do you know about the men who come around here?â
Seokjin freezes. âMen?â
The woman levels a stare at him, eyes swimming with something like pity, something like regret. Seokjinâs heart clenches. âIâve lived here since I was born. I know everyone except the men who come knocking on her door. Do you know about them?â She takes in the look on his face, clicks her teeth. Turns her back to him to take the kettle off its base. âYour face tells me everything I need to know.â
Seokjin closes his mouth, unsure what to say next.
âI went over there once, to bring some misdelivered mail to her neighbor. Damn postal service. I donât usually go to her placeâshe keeps to herself, you know, a very private person. But there were men at her door. Big guys.â She pauses to remove the steeper, frowning slightly. âHeard her call them oppa.â
Brother, or an older male friend. Seokjin realizes with a pang that he doesnât know anyone that you would refer to as oppa. You used to call him that, actually. Then, once Hyejin was born, oppa became Hyejin-appa, became jagi-yah.Â
He knows you have a cousin, one you used to contact once in a while, but the only time he saw her was to ask her if she knew where youâd gone. Heâs never met a single other family member of yours. His heart contorts again.
At the time, he was too in love to press it. So enamored with your mere presence in his life, so determined to keep you safe and protected, that it didnât matter to him how private you were. It didnât matter that you kept parts of your life cordoned off and locked away, even from him. He told himselfâat least back thenâthat he didnât need to know. He accepted your judgment as best. He doesnât overthink most things, and he chose not to overthink this.
Only now does it occur to him that protecting you, loving you, might have necessitated some honesty on your part. Some pressing on his part.Â
Under the table, he rapidly taps out a Kakao to the sitterâhe senses heâll be here a while. The sitter agrees to stay overnight, and he lets out the breath heâs been holding.Â
The woman brings over a plastic tray: two steaming mugs of tea, a small plate of cut persimmon and apple. He bows his head in thanks, accepts the mug, lets the warmth seep into his skin. The rich, sweet scent of the tea curls into his lungs, easing his ache just a bit.
âI only really heard them once,â the woman continues, crossing her legs under the table. âBut they were asking for money, from what I could hear.â
Seokjin lets his eyes slide shut. âMoney for what?â
The crunch of fruit between teeth. âI donât know. Heard mentions of family, maybe. Family needing money. They mentioned a husband. Her husband. You, Iâm guessing.â
Seokjin still doesnât open his eyes. âThey wanted my money.â
He didnât grow up wealthy. They had just enough to get by, his parents running a series of street food stalls in a tourist-heavy part of Seoul. They werenât poor, necessarily, but he does remember bundling up in the winter to cut down the heating bill, having to skip the occasional school trip when his parents couldnât afford to send him, working part-time as a chicken delivery boy through high school and college.Â
All of that changed once he graduated from college. A series of strokes of luck, some late nights sending off resumes at the library, and a few good sunbaes had landed him where he is now: an executive at a popular gaming company. He isnât at the top of the food chain, but he certainly makes enough for Hyejin to have a sizable trust fund, to retire his parents, and to pay off the practically luxurious apartment he lives in now. Heâs still careful with his purchases and hyper-conscious of his account balances, what with old habits dying hard and all. But he knows that he has more money than he knows what to do with.
No amount of money would have made him hesitate in the slightest, if paying it meant he could keep you safe forever. The air rushes out of his lungs at the thought of you not knowing this. At the idea that you could even doubt this.
The woman observes him with that mix of pity and regret again, then suddenly becomes stern again. âIt wouldnât be a good idea to see her. Not at this hour.â She nods at the ancient radio alarm clock on the end tableâSeokjin realizes with a start that itâs almost eleven. âDo you have a place to stay for the evening?â
â
Seokjin doesnât fall asleep until almost two in the morning.
His mind gnaws at Hyejin. Wonders whether sheâll be okay at home without him, wishes he could have explained to her before leaving her overnight. Heâs told the sitter about Hyejinâs illness, trusts her to give Hyejin the right medication and feed her bland porridge, but regret washes through him anyway, and sleep evades him.
Heâs grateful for Hyejin. She doesnât have to be anything or do anything for Seokjin to love herâshe just is, and for that, he loves her endlessly. But she also kept him together when you left, and without her, he isnât sure he would have survived the worst of it.
The mornings when he woke up against his will, his chest searing with raw and unbridled pain when he realized that no, your departure wasnât just some terrible nightmare, he got up anywayâHyejin needed breakfast, needed someone to help her brush her teeth and drop her off at school. The afternoons he struggled to sit in his meetings, take phone calls and draft emails, proceed with business as usualâhe only had to look at the framed photo of his daughter on his desk for a swift kick of motivation, a little extra push to get through it all. And the evenings he felt sorely tempted to sink into the couch with a bottle of whiskey and enough Ambien to put himself into a coma, he walked into Hyejinâs room insteadâcurled up on the rug beside her, one of her endless stuffed animals tucked under his head, and let the soft rise and fall of her breathing lull him to rest. She was his medicine, his therapy, a small pinprick of light at the end of the darkest tunnel.Â
If he couldnât stay alive for himself, he kept himself alive for her.
And then, of course, there is the promise of seeing you in the morning. The woman had offered to take him to see you when the cafe opened at dawn, handing him a set of pajamas her son had left behind on his last visit. He wriggles around in the well-worn fabricâtheyâre a bit too short on him, but feel soft on his skin nonetheless.
It was foolishânot to mention riskyâto agree to sleep in a strangerâs house like this, and it occurs to him now that he should have insisted on staying at a motel nearby for the night, but at any rate heâs already buried three blankets deep on this womanâs living room floor, and it would be terribly rude for him to leave in the middle of the night. So he burrows deeper into the blankets, waiting for sleep to claim him.
He wonders how youâve changed. Worry buzzes through him: Will it be like starting all over again, with you? Do you still love him, still remember all the little quirks about him that he remembers about you? Is there anything even left to salvage?
He shakes his head at no one in particular. Itâs you, itâs him. He doesnât care how long it takesâfor you, heâd wait an infinite number of years.
â
By the time the woman emerges from her bedroom to take him to the cafe, Seokjinâs already dressed again, in his slightly wrinkled clothes from yesterday, blankets folded in a tidy stack by the couch. The woman glances at the clockâitâs only six in the morning.
âLetâs go,â she says simply.
The walk to the cafe is long by Seoul standards, easily at least three subway stops, but Seokjinâs too consumed by his own nerves to care, grateful for the half-hour of peace heâs been granted. The half-hour allows him to collect his thoughts, sort out his complex feelings. Heâd offered to drive, but the woman had turned him down.Â
You need time to calm down and think, sheâd said. Seokjin knew she was right, but he was tiring quickly of that pitying look in her eyes. Like he had no idea what was ahead.Â
Of course heâd come here to find you. He just hadnât expected it to happen so fast.
The village hums with energy, the farmers having gotten up much earlier than he did to work the fields, well before the sun came up. The pair of them attract a number of curious glances on their way, some questions about where theyâre headed, about the young man walking beside her. She just waves them off with a mild grin, says sheâll explain laterâSeokjin bows his head obediently anyway, utters his greetings. His mother would kill him if he didnât.
He tilts his head up to look at the silver sky, sucks in the humid air, takes in the bluish-green hue of the rolling hills around him. Dirt cakes his loafers as they pass over well-worn footbridges and narrow paths crowded by overgrown foliage, but he canât bring himself to mind. Not when heâs this close.Â
And then, all too quickly, the woman rests a hand on his upper arm and nudges him out of his head.
âShe runs the place,â the woman says, nodding toward the building in front of them. Itâs small, a bright blue house-like structure, so completely unlike the minimalist cafes peppering every street corner in Seoul that it takes a moment for him to recognize what it is. He reads its name from a small wooden sign above the door.
CafĂŠ Moon.
Moon. Youâd always loved looking at the moon. He swallows, looks at the woman for reassurance, unsure if heâs ready.
âGo on,â the woman snaps, that stern and dry affection making itself known again. She gives him a firm shove in his upper back. âIâll wait out here.â
Seokjin nods gamely, clasps his hand around the handle, and yanks open the glass door, pushing himself through it before he can think about it any longer.
He sees you, and his world comes to a stop.
â
You see Seokjin, and everything around you slowsâwords, images, sounds.
Full lips, bright eyes, dark brows. Hair slightly mussed and pushed back from his forehead. Why is his dress shirt so wrinkled? Is that mud caked on his shoes?Â
The cafeâs hit a lull. Most of the early-early risers have come and gone, and the next wave of regularsâemployees from the local businesses, produce truck drivers, the retired womenâs group that gathers to gossip and complain about their useless sonsâwonât be in for another hour or two.
Which means youâre staring at your husband across an empty space, eyes rounded, lips parted. You have enough of your wits about you to not drop the glass carafe in your handâyou set it down gently on the wooden counter, not breaking eye contact the entire time.
You swallow. âHi.â
He blinks, his entire face crinkling into it in a way that both feels utterly familiar and shatters your heart into a million pieces.Â
âHi,â he breathes back. His voice is the sweetest thing youâve heard in months, and itâs like you never left.
â
âYou wrote me.â
The woman who housed and walked Seokjin here is Youngja, the closest thing this town has to a village chief, and the closest thing you have to a friend here. Youngja putters around behind the counter now, serving the occasional customer and eyeing the pair of you from a distance. She doesnât own the cafe, but sheâs been around long enough that she can probably run it better than you do.
Meanwhile, you and Seokjin sit across from each other at a corner table with bated breath, hands wrapped around steaming mugs of coffee, unable to look away from each other.
You feel an odd tightness in your chest. You stopped crying ten minutes ago, and after running into his arms, youâd untangled yourself from his grasp with an overwhelming sense of shame.Â
You donât even know if he still loves you, cares for you, after what youâve done to him. Now, your eyes drop to the table.
âI did write you,â you say slowly. âI didnât expect you to be able to find me.â
âAh, well. Mail goes through the postal hubs, you know.â His lips twitch a little, and it almost feels like youâre in college again, on your first date with the goofy but beautiful boy from your literature discussion, palms sweating and heart thumping with uncertainty.
âRight.â You say it quietly, and then you inhale. âSeokjin, Iââ
âIâm sorry,â he says, interrupting you.Â
You look up, eyes widening. âWhy are you sorry? Iâm the one who left.â
Seokjin flinches a little, as if the reminder stings him. âYes, but⌠I feel like I might have done a better job at⌠well. Being your husband, figuring out what was going on. And in case you forgot, I know you. I know you didnât leave for no good reason.â
Your chest aches. What did you do to deserve him? You curl into yourself, still unable to look directly at himâif you do, youâll cry again, and neither of you needs that now. âPlease donât apologize. I did this. To you. To us. ToâŚ.â Your throat tightens. âWhereâs Hyejin-ie?â Her name emerges broken, hoarse. Itâs the first time youâve said it out loud in over a year.
Seokjin makes a small noise, and you finally look up. His eyes are shining. âSheâs with a sitter right now. Sheâs⌠wonderful, so smart and funny. Weâre⌠weâre doing okay.â
âThatâs good,â you murmur, but youâre not surprisedâyouâve always trusted Seokjin, wholly and fully. You wouldnât have left otherwise.Â
But heâs here; he came to find you. Youâd sent the letter with no intention of seeing him anytime soon, but maybe some part of you had hoped heâd find his way to you. That the letter would reopen the door, re-tie the invisible string, and bring him back.
You realize now, though, that he hasn't changed. Heâs always been steady, ever-present like a heartbeat, or the moon. Of course he came to you. He never left.
You take a deep breath to ground yourself.
âI think you deserve an explanation.â
â
Epilogue
You feel like absolute death.Â
You press your cheek to the blissfully cool porcelain of the toilet seat. You're vaguely disgusted by yourselfâit's not the cleanest place to restâbut you're too wrung out to care, your entire body aching from bending over all morning. And not in a good way.
Your knees are starting to throb from pressing into the tile floor when you hear Seokjin calling for you, his voice growing closer as he wanders deeper into your bedroom.
âJagi-yah, Hyejin-ie is calling for you, she says I donât cut her sandwiches rightâyah.âÂ
He rushes over and crouches beside you, brows knit with worry, one hand raised automatically to stroke your upper back. His touch feels nice, the warmth soothing you despite the residual ache pounding through your head and searing the back of your throat. âWhatâs wrong?â He doesnât even wrinkle his nose at the smell of vomit lingering in the airâyou make a mental note to reward him for that later.
You try to take a deep breath to calm the roaring in your ears, but it emerges shuddering, unsteady. Seokjin stiffens beside you, face going white.Â
âHey,â Seokjin says gently, pushing your hair out of your face, tucking it behind your ear. âI need you to tell me, please. Whatâs going on? Do you need me to take you to the hospital?â
âN-No,â you manage, closing your eyes.Â
Your hand drops automatically to your stomach. You havenât had your period in a while, you realize distantly. Seokjin doesnât noticeâhe just waits patiently for you to come back to him, to find the words.
âDid you eat something bad?â He presses the back of his hand to your forehead, a gesture so tender and domestic that it threatens to flood your nose with tears. âOr feeling sick?â
âNo,â you repeat softly. You take a deep breath and unstick your face from the toilet seat, then let yourself sink into his arms. He pulls you closer to him, presses your face into his broad chest, runs a hand up and down your arm.
Seokjin sighs, and you can hear the gears working in his head. âOkay. Why donât youââÂ
âI think I might be pregnant.â
He freezes. âWhat?â Hushed, shocked.
âI said, I thinkââ
Seokjin doesnât wait for you to say it a second time. He pulls back and holds your face in his hands, effectively shutting you up. But you smile, because the look on his face is the loveliest thing youâve ever seen. Surprise, joy, delight, pure euphoria flicker across his soft features, his eyes flitting between your pupils.
âPregnant,â he says quietly, bitten lips pulling into a small, disbelieving smile.
âIâm not sure, but I am late,â you say, just as quiet, just as elated. Youâre afraid to shatter this moment, afraid to break the unadulterated joy settling over the two of you on your bathroom floor. âThereâs a test under the counter.â
âOkay, Iâm going to make sure our little monster isnât cutting her own fingers off in the kitchen,â Seokjin whispers. He presses a kiss to your temple, long and deliberate, before getting to his feet with an old-man groan that makes you snort. âYou take the test. Iâll be right back.â
You peel open the box, which does that annoying thing where the layers of cardboard separate, which leads to a few extra seconds of puncturing past the paper with your thumb before your hand finally closes on the plastic stick. You skim the instructions, pee on it, snap the cap on, and wait, taking deep breaths, pulling your pajama shorts back up. Maybe you should go see what your husband and daughter are up to while youâre waiting, you wonder, pacing back and forth over your bath mat with your arms crossed.
It wasnât easy at first, working your way back into Hyejinâs life. Tying up the loose ends had been one thingâfiguring out how much money would placate your family, having it wired, getting restraining orders in place to keep them away from you and Seokjin and Hyejin. Then it had been moving back to Seoul, saying goodbye to the people youâd come to know in the village, promising Youngja that youâd send pictures of your daughter, promising to return for visits.Â
And then there was Hyejin. You learned quickly that she took after you, for better or for worseâhers was a trust that needed to be earned, not given over easily just because you bought her bungeoppang or took her to Lotte World. Both of which youâd done in the first week alone, in a pathetic attempt to win her affections.
Youâre not certain you deserve to be bringing another child into the world. The guilt still eats at you, despite Seokjinâs (decidedly undeserved) reassurances that you had only been doing what you thought was best for her. That your leaving her had nothing to do with selfishness and everything to do with protecting your family. And it lasts even though Hyejin has warmed up to you, comfortable enough around you now to tease and blow kisses and throw tantrums the way she does with her father, putting her small and fragile heart in your hands again.
But itâs better now. Different. You run your fingers between your hips, almost without thinking about it. You know it is.
You glance at your phoneâfive minutes have gone by. You flip over the test.
Not pregnant.
Huh. Your lips twist into a rueful, joyless expression. Well, perhaps it wasnât meant to be.
You hear your husbandâs footsteps approaching again, and then heâs at the door, his wide shoulders brushing against the frame. âWell?â he asks, slightly breathless, eyes wide with anticipation.
You wordlessly hand the stick over, wet side toward you with the cap secured over it. âNope.â
Itâs almost comical how abruptly Seokjinâs face falls. But heâs your husband, so he composes himself quickly, and it only takes one deep breath to wipe the utter devastation off his face. âOh. Well⌠how are we feeling about that?â
We. You feel like youâre on the most insane rollercoaster of emotionsâgoing from feeling like shit to shaking with excitement to sinking with something that feels suspiciously like heartbreak, all in the span of ten minutes. You sigh. âConfused, I guess.âÂ
Seokjin wraps his arms around you again, resting his chin on top of your head like he likes to do, and you let your body heat meld with his, let this small gesture dissolve the lump in your throat. âDisappointed?â he murmurs.Â
Youâre grateful. You fell in love with him because of his simplicity, the ease with which he moved through lifeâhis ability to make light of even the darkest moments. But youâre reminded now that he sees you, fully, completely. That he sees your pain and bears it with you, even if itâs not in his nature to sit with negative emotions.
âYeah,â you whisper. âAnd maybe a little nauseated, still.â
He presses his hand flat against your lower back, and it feels nice there. Secure. âHow about you visit the doctor, and Iâll take Hyejin to school? Could just be something you ate, but⌠just to be safe.â
You nod, pout a little. âBut I love taking her to school.â
âI know,â he laughs, âbut you can take her tomorrow, if youâre feeling better.â
So thatâs how you end up sitting in an urgent care clinic alone on a Thursday morning, leg bouncing up and down nervously against a green plastic chair. The nausea persistsâyou step into the restroom a few times to vomit but just wind up dry-heaving, force yourself to breathe through it and take small sips of water, try not to inhale the powerful smell of antiseptic, shield your eyes against the blinding fluorescent lights. Youâre far from the highest-priority patient, so itâs about two hours of stewing in your own thoughts before a physician finally sees you.
The doctor examines you briefly, asking you a few questions before taking your temperature and sending you for various testsâby the time the various physiciansâ assistants and nurses are done poking and prodding and interrogating you, itâs nearly noon. As you idle in the patient room, waiting for your doctor to come back with results, you tap your phone awake to find about a dozen messages from Seokjin.
Seokjin [11:02 AM]: Any news?Â
Seokjin [11:02 AM]: Hyejin pitched a fit this morning when she found out I was taking her, by the way
Seokjin [11:03 AM]: Trying not to take it personally. itâs not like i clothe and feed her or anything
Seokjin [11:03 AM]: Checked your location, youâre still at the hospital??
Seokjin [11:04 AM]: What do i even pay taxes for
Seokjin [11:05 AM]: Wait, are urgent cares publicly funded
Seokjin [11:06 AM]: I love you
Seokjin [11:06 AM]: Sorry I couldnât be there with you, have to meet with Mr. Park today, that asshole, i swear he wants to run this business into the ground
Seokjin [11:07 AM]: I promise i donât use that word in front of our daughter
Seokjin [11:15 AM]: Ok, I canât stand the silence, I postponed my meeting, iâll be there soon
Your eyes flicker to the corner of your screenâitâs 11:45 now. You quickly tap out a response.
Me [11:46 AM]: It's fine, take your meeting. Iâm doing ok, doctor will be back with test results soon
Seokjin [11:47 AM]: Too late
Thereâs a knock at your door, and you look up.
Itâs not Seokjin. Itâs the doctor, grinning beatifically in a way that immediately puts you on edge. âHi, maâam, how are we doing this morning?â
âFine,â you say tersely, too nervous to come up with a more polite response.
âGood!â If the doctor notices that youâre stiff, she doesnât comment, wiggling the mouse to wake the computer in the room. âSo, I have some newsâŚ. Youâre pregnant!â
Your eyebrows shoot up to your hairline; your hands twist into and tear the paper covering the vinyl bed under you. âBut I took a test this morning. It was negative.â
âWell, that can sometimes happen, if you test too early on,â the doctor says knowingly, handing you a pile of pamphlets. You accept them, eyes roaming over them blankly. They all have unbearably corny titles, like What to Expect in Nine Months and Feeding You and Your Baby. You donât know what to sayâyour brain is short-circuiting, feeding you nothing but static.Â
âI take it this is good news?â the doctor asks, not unkindly.
âYes,â you say quietly, tears belatedly springing to your eyes. âYes, it is.â
She sends you off with information for scheduling prenatal appointments and tips on managing your morning sickness, but you canât get out of there fast enough, and the second you step back into the waiting area, you see him, sitting on one of those stupid green chairs with his hair falling in soft waves across his forehead.
Seokjin.Â
The father of both of your babies.
hello, could you make yoongi wallpapers? it can be with any photo. Thank you in advance!
Hope you'll like it! đ I've some more. I'll tag you in them.
Yoongi Lockscreen / cute pout đť
Like and reblog if you save.
⢠HASHIRAS (MANGĂ) ICONS
° Like/Reblog if you saved
bts talking about past memories âĄ
yeah the past was honestly the best, but my best is what comes next
HAPPY 9TH ANNIVERSARY, BTS
[ memories ]
Can we talk about how jirouâs awesomeness just surpasses everyone elsesâ?
hearing hero earphone jack  kyouka jirou
1⌠2âŚ. 3⌠10
She/her |âď¸đ⨠| Obsessed w/ Anime and K-pop đâď¸â¨ | I write 𤡠| Requests open!
110 posts