Plantito Joon đ±
Dextrocardia. Originally a medical term, but also a way to describe someone who's got their heart in the right place.
"She's been moved to another operation to help out. This pairing is necessary because you'll be undercover as spouses. I know you two can be professional about this."
"What?!" It's Jeongguk's upset voice that sounds, and for once, you share his displeased opinion.
Spouses.
pairing:Â cop!jk x f detective!reader
genre:Â undercover cops, fake marriage, e2l au, angst, fluff, (smut?)
word count:Â 6.6k
warnings: talk about dv and sa but pretty briefly. also includes some (implied) trauma/ptsd reactions.
rating:Â NC-17 â Adults Only
masterlist
part 12/?Â
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© dextrocardia is copyright jeonstudios. this fic can not be modified, re-posted, or translated without my permission.
An hour and a half later, youâre on your way to the bathroom when you run into Jeongguk nearly head first. He mentioned at breakfast that he was going to use the gym before taking on the window once more, and judging by the sweat thatâs soaked through the dark green t-shirt and also glistens on his face, thatâs where heâs just come from. Â
âOh,â you step back, saying the first thing that comes to mind. âAlmost didnât recognize you. You know⊠with your shirt on.â
It may be stupid, but better than to admit how seeing him sweaty, his breathing still heavy and his veins more prominent than usual, makes your own body heat up.Â
He dabs his forehead with his arm, âYeah⊠You know, Iâm sorry for being such an ass to you. I thought it was cathartic, getting my revenge by flustering you. I didnât understand that I was probably scaring you.â
Your eyes widen. He was. You remember your heart rate increasing uncomfortably whenever heâd walk toward you, his shirt off and saying something suggestive. If he wasnât actually intentionally scaring you by implying he could do something to you whether you wanted it or not then he was an ass but not unforgivably so. It was immature, yeah, but if he thought you shot his friend for getting rejected and then protected by the chief, it almost makes it understandable. Almost.
âItâs okay. I appreciate it. It doesnât bother me here, though, and itâs your home.â
He tilts his head slightly, looking down at you. âItâs what I want to do, and besides, itâs not nearly as hot as it was this summer.â
For a brief moment, you stand there, looking up at him and wondering if heâs actually a real person, a real man. Somehow he wants to do the right thing, be as kind and considerate he can, even if he doesnât have to. Itâs so far from the Jeongguk you thought you knew, but also⊠not. In a way, it makes sense that he hated you so much because heâs loyal, wants everything to be fair and right, which makes you wonderâŠ
âCan I ask you something?â
âMhm?â
âWhy did you hate me so much?â you question, âI know you thought I shot Hoseong, either on purpose or by being reckless with the gun, but⊠what were your thoughts?â
His gaze turns curious, and you assume he doesnât understand exactly what youâre getting atâafter all, he thinks heâs explained it before.
âI hated you because I thought you shot him for rejecting you, and then I hated you because I thought you got away with it. I thought that the chief protected you by not dealing with what happened. Then I hated you more because you were always complaining about men when it seemed like you got off scot-free because you were a woman. I felt like you excused your shitty behavior as being a feminist or whatever and accused anyone calling you out of being sexist.âÂ
You consider his words. âThank you.â
You were right.
âYouâre⊠welcome?â he tilts his head slightly. âIâm gonna try to finish the window quickly, but Iâll need to head to the station after that, and I wanted to ask you if you want to come? I donât think itâll be too crowded today, and I know whoâs working; all good guys. â
You bite your lip. Going to the station would mean getting stared at and whispered about because at the end of the day, what happened to youâand then subsequently to you and Jeonggukâwas what set the ball in motion.Â
Sensing your hesitancy, Jeongguk continues, âWeâre going over some paperwork of the changes weâre implementing, so Jihyo will be there, and weâve asked all female employees to tell her if thereâs anyone theyâve ever felt unsafe with, and weâre investigating those. The guys there right now are people I really trust from back home and the rest have no complaints, no reports made against them.â
You donât really want to ever set foot at the station again, but logically, you realize that youâll probably have to. After all, you canât keep your pay and never work again, and you donât have any other education. While you could try to find another job, it would have to be something like a customer service job, and your nineteen old self was more than done with that.Â
Jeongguk still looks at you with gentle and hopeful eyes. Sooner or later, youâll have to. Maybe itâll be easier to have him with you when you do? Additionally, the least you can do is point out which guys havenât made comments about you or threatened you.
âOkay.â
The tiniest form of raindrops hit the windshield as Jeongguk drives you toward the station. You bounce your knee nervously, trying to focus on the fact that youâll get to see Jihyo and Sana again.
It turns out that walking inside the station with Jeongguk is just more reason for people to stare. Heâs wearing dark blue and somewhat baggy jeans and a big black hoodie, but even without his uniform, he gives off an aura of authority among the people present.Â
You trail behind him, just knowing that heâs glaring at those who let their eyes linger on you for too long, making them turn away their heads apologetically. You thought everyone knew, you really did, but judging by how many seem to want to come up to you and show their sympathy (or pretend to?), thatâs evidently not the case. They all know now, however.
Jeongguk leads you through the corridors, and you stay behind him, feeling more unsure the farther in you go.
A man walks past in front of you as you reach the open part of the station, but you hear Jeongguk order a low âDonâtâ when his step falters. Itâs a guy youâve seen around but donât really know, and even his name is escaping you at the moment.Â
âSorry,â he says before smiling gently at you, âGood to see you again.â
You nod, wondering to yourself if itâll ever get easier. You donât recall hearing the man insult or threaten you, but how can you believe he truly didnât know?
Jeongguk leads you into the room you once knew as the old chiefâs office, but now Jihyoâs family name is stamped on the glass. Itâs empty, and you relax your shoulders when he closes the door behind you.
âYou okay?â
âYeah. Some still stare but less so than I assumed.â
âI might have told them not to make a scene or make you uncomfortable.â
His words have a small, appreciative smile pulling on your mouth. Two seconds later, thereâs a knock on the door, and you see the blurry shape of a man through the frosted window.
âJimin,â Jeongguk mumbles, walking back to the door to open it.Â
A smiling, dark haired man walks through, a little shorter than Jeongguk, and his eyes land on you. Immediately, he approaches, his hand outreached. Youâre not sure if itâs the way heâs smilingâhis eyes narrowing but almost endearingly soâor something else, but heâs got a whole different aura than the typical man who works around here. Even Jeongguk at first glance looks more mysterious and intimidating.
âNice to meet you, Iâm Jimin.â
His hand is warm when it shakes yours, and he nods when you say your own name. From behind him, you hear someone repeat it excitedly. Jimin steps aside, and you spot Sana approaching fast.
Your heart grows warm as you meet her in the middle and wrap your arms around her. She holds you close, doesnât seem too keen on letting go, and you feel the exact same.Â
âI missed you,â she mumbles into the embrace, and you hug her tighter. The truth is that you met with Jihyo a few times after the incident at the house, but you only spoke with Sana on the phone before you decided to leave town, telling them to give you space and not to visit. Being around people had felt overwhelming, but in retrospect, youâd been very lonely.
Sana steps back, âJihyo had some pretty urgent matters to attend to, but hopefully she makes it before you leave. She said we could get started.â
âRight, there are some people already in the conference rooms, but we can just stay here,â Jimin points to a few chairs stacked in the corner, and Sana goes to get them.Â
âSure. Coffee, anyone?â Jeongguk asks, getting a chorus of affirmatives.
You watch him leave the room and the door glide shut behind him. Taking a seat, you clasp your hands on the table, looking at them inconspicuously.
âSo, how do you know Jeongguk?â you ponder, even though your guess is that they used to work together before Jeongguk came to town.
Jimin pulls out the chair to your left and sits down. âWe met at the academy, worked at the same station, first as highway patrol and then he switched to patrol and like⊠mostly DV calls before he transferred. After everything went down here, he and Jihyo asked me and a few others to help out.â
You blink in confusion, peering up at him. âDomestic violence?â
âYeah. Of course, thereâs not a specific DV unit, but if he was free and close, we usually sent him,â he explains casually.
âItâs often a complex situation as Iâm sure you know; a manly man does best at talking to the offenderâusually a manâbut a woman or a less âharshâ man, like myself, usually does better talking to the victim and earning their trust. Jeongguk, for some reason, does well at both. So since we didnât have a lot of female officers, he and a partner usually went. He would also talk to a lot of victims that came in to the station, taking their statements and supporting them to get the rape kits done if needed.â
Youâre thrown back to the living room in your fake house, where youâre accusing Jeongguk of being one of the people leaving women to die at the hands of their husbands. You recall vividly how he stood there, just taking everything you threw at him. Why didnât he tell you?
âOh,â is the first thing that comes out of your mouth. âItâs never worked like that here, as far as I know?â
It really hasnât. You couldnât imagine the chief calculating whoâs got the most fitting, empathetic personality and sending them out for calls like that. Closest guys went and then whoever was free talked to victims at the station. How well the job was done is a whole other thing, and you donât even want to think about it or how any critique you and your female colleagues have raised has been handled.
âYeah. Of course, itâs not always doable, and priority for all urgent cases is to send help out as quickly as possible, but if we could, then thatâs what we did.â
Jiminâs words leave you with a lot to think about, and you canât really keep your full attention on the papers Sana and Jimin pull out and start to go through. Though you hear them continuing on the subject, discussing whether to assign some officers a certain priority when a domestic violence or sexual assault victim comes in or just hold more thorough classes in how to talk to those people for everyone employed at the station.
A few minutes later, Jeongguk returns with coffee, and he wastes no time joining in from the chair beside you. You hum and nod sometimes, but itâs definitely hard to focus.
âYou okay?â Jeongguk nudges you gently, observing you with big, understanding eyes.Â
Logically, it wouldnât be weird for you to feel intimidated by the current topics, and itâs most likely what he thinks is the reason for your quietness.Â
âYeah. Just⊠have a lot on my mind.â
He nods at the small smile you give him and surprises you by casually reaching for your hand on your lap. With his face forward and attention on the discussion, he briefly intertwines your fingers, stroking his thumb against your skin. Then before you know it, heâs pulling away.
âI have some⊠news,â Sana says with a lip balm in hand, watching your expression through the mirror as you exit the bathroom stall behind her.
âOkayâŠâ you say, confused, joining her at the sinks to wash your hands.
âIâve been in touch with a lawyer. You know how the bar owners said they didnât save any footage from the Christmas party?â
You nod, thinking back to how you practically begged the owners of the bar where you all went for the after party to release their footage. They said no, said their cameras werenât functional, and the chief didnât grant the search warrant you requested. It was always so clear that the owners liked the business that the nearby stationâs get-togethers brought, and you definitely know at least one of them was real buddy-buddy with some officers.
âJimin and Jeongguk helped me get it. It was Ryung, not the one who put the drugs in the drink, but who asked the bartender to. Iâve been in touch with a lawyer, and we think we have clear enough evidence to prosecute.â
Your eyes are wide. Fuck, you hadnât expected them to work together like that. The owners trying to protect whatever officer it was, sure, maybe even due to threats from said officer, but to have evidence of them essentially committing the crime together?
âOh my God. Sana⊠That makes me so⊠I wanna say happy?â
She chuckles, but you can tell there are emotions bubbling under the surface. Fortunatelyâthank Godânothing happened to her that night since you and the rest of her friends at the station were quick to notice that something was wrong and took her to the hospital, but you can only imagine what itâs like to know that someoneâmost likely watching her in her day to day lifeâdrugged her. Of course, their intentions were anything but good, and walking around, not knowing who was bold enough to try, and might just give it another shot, would terrify anyone. At least you knew who was trying to get rid of you.
âSomething⊠needed to happen here,â she places the lip balm in her pocket, turning her full attention to you through the mirror. âWeâve been brave and fighting tooth and nail, but it was never going to be enough because weâre women and outnumbered. The men here, they either knew or didnâtâand evidently there were actually quite a few who shared Jeonggukâs beliefâbut the ones who knewâeven if they didnât partakeâthey didnât stand up for us. I hate that you left without telling usââ
ââWould you have let me go?â
âNo, of course not. In hindsight, yeah, it was the best thing you couldâve done because we needed something to happen. We needed Jeongguk. But when I found out that you were at the hospital after going on a solo mission with him? I thought heâd killed you.â
You let your gaze fall to the floor sadly. âIâm sorry for worrying you. I just⊠I couldnât do it anymore.â
Sana touches her hand to your shoulder, giving you a sad but understanding smile, âHow are you now? I imagine itâs scary, knowing they havenât been caught yet.â
You sigh. âYeah. I donât know, in a way, I feel⊠numb. Sometimes I used to think I heard stuff⊠Footsteps, voices⊠Living with Jeongguk makes me feel safer in some ways.â
âBut?â
You exhale, feeling your shoulders drop slightly.
Sana gives you a sad and almost defeated look. âDonât do that. I really think heâs one of the good ones.â
âDonât do what? Nothing is going to happen.â
âYou sure? Knowing you, would you have agreed to live with him if you didnât like him at least a little? And do you have any idea how much he cares for you? I heard from Jimin that he worked his ass off just to find out where you were, like from the moment he was discharged from the hospital and we wouldnât tell him. He still asked about you almost everyday, even after he figured out your location and technically could go and see for himself. He works day in and day out to catch these guys for what they did to us and to him, but mostly for you.â
You tap your nails against the porcelain sink, listening to her words but not sure what to make of them. âHe might be one of the good guys but I promise you, nothing like that is ever going to happen. Not between us.â
She purses her lips. âOkay, if youâre certain. But be honest with yourself if anything changes.â
âSo, you and Jimin,â you change the subject, watching Sana roll her dark eyes and fail to suppress a smile.
âHeâs a sweet guy. I didnât think I needed to talk about what happened at that party, I thought I was over it. But since nothing happened and we never knew who it was? I guess I never let myself really process it and the always-present⊠fear I lived with. I know I talked to you, but I think I needed to talk to someone who in a way wasnât in the same boat.â
âI get that,â you smile a smile that grows into a wide grin, âCan you believe it? We might finally get some justice.â
Two hours later, youâre rushing from the stationâs front doors to the parked car, rain still falling from the gray sky. Jeongguk makes it before you, opening the passenger door.
Weird, why would you drive his car?
He looks back at you where youâve come to a stop, âWhat are you waiting for? Get in,â he smiles, undoubtedly confused. Thereâs a raindrop running slowly from his forehead, down between his eyebrows and down the side of his nose.
Oh. He opened the door for you.
You move your legs, getting inside while Jeongguk remains standing there with his hand on the top of the door. As soon as youâre comfortably inside, he shuts it and rounds the car.
âDo you want to come with me or should I drop you off at home on the way?â
âHome, please. I think one station a day is enough for me,â you let out a stressed laugh at the mention of Jeonggukâs old workplace, gazing out through the window.Â
âOf course,â he says, placing his arm on the back of your seat to look behind him, reversing the car.
You fiddle with your hands in your lap, glancing over at him while he steers the car out onto the road. âSo, Sana told me she might have a case against Ryung as well.âÂ
âYeah. If the bartender testifies against him, which I think heâll do considering all the other charges weâre working on. If we can just catch them first to make him more relaxed with them in custody.â
You nod, more so to yourself. You hope the bartender testifies that he didnât drug Sana by his own accord. Hopefully, heâd rather share the blame than take it all, even if he fears an eventual revenge act by Ryungâs cop friends.
âAnd you helped her?â you ask, tapping your fingers against your jean-clad thighs anxiously.
âTo get the tapes, yeah. I remembered you told me what happened to her, so I asked her when I got back, and she explained everything. Owner was a real asshole and definitely tried to avoid it, so I might have threatened him a little.â
You look at the side of his face as he continues. âThat if he didnât hand all the footage over and make sure the cameras are always up and functional, Iâd look into every crevice of the bar. Which, we technically canât, because we donât have any legal reason to at the moment. But Iâm hoping it might deter them from shitty behavior in the future.â
Heâs got such stunning features; the nose, the jaw, his eyes⊠His hair is relatively unstyled, parted to reveal his forehead. You didnât think he could get more physically attractive, but boy, were you wrong. How much of oneâs attractiveness is due to their personality? You find it so⊠heart-warming to know that he helped your friend and didnât bring it up with you in order to win any brownie points. It feels like⊠he did it because he truly wanted to help her and left it to her to decide who should know.
âThank you, Jeongguk,â you say earnestly, watching him turn his head to look at you for as long as he can before he has to focus his attention back to the road.
âNo problem.â
You hear Jeongguk drive off only when youâre safely inside. Slowly but surely, your heart rate continues to increase, almost at the same rate as the rain thatâs on a whole new level now. You faintly recall reading something about a smaller storm rolling through the city, but you didnât remember it happening this week.
The first thing you do is lock the front door. You even pull on the handle a few times just to be sure, and then you head toward the living room before you walk back, checking it again.
Itâs six p.mm when the first round of lightning hits. Holding your breath, you wait for it. One, two, three⊠There it is, the thunder. It shakes the entire house, and you feel restlessness fill your body. Your feet take you through the house and into your bedroom, locking both locks and sitting down on the floor with your back against the bed.Â
However, Jeongguk removed the curtains for better access to the window and seems to have forgotten to put them back up. Thereâs a small space between the wooden planks, and you turn your head away as lightning flashes through.
Your breathing turns shallow, and you rise to your feet again. One, two⊠Any second now, it could happen. Any second. It rumbles again, and you feel it in your entire body.
Unlocking your bedroom door, you end up wandering the hallway in search of a calmer spot. You find a fitting room, and you pull the thicker curtains closed before slumping down with your back against the bed. The silence between the thunder fills your head with thoughts and memories and your body aches in pain. Trying to tune out the waves of thunder, you hide your face against your arms that are hugging your knees to your chest. Itâs closer now, and you feel the walls rumble with it.Â
You try to keep calm, but your shoulders are so tense. It feels like itâs right above you; it never moves. Moment after moment passes but it never moves.Â
Footsteps stop next to you.
âHey, whatâs wrong?â someone says, and you open your eyes, peering over your arm at the familiar but worried face where heâs kneeling beside you. âIâve been looking everywhere for you.â
When did he even return? Wasnât he supposed to visit the other station? Or⊠has he already? You canât tell.
âIâm⊠fine,â you sniffle, raising your head, and meeting his brown eyes for a second. âItâs just that⊠bad things tend to happen to me when it storms.â
âI see,â he says, âDo you mind if I sit with you?â
You shrug because itâs his house, after all. Jeongguk sits down next to you with his back against his bed as well, barely touching your side.Â
âNo one is looking for us, you know?â he informs quietly. âWeâll be perfectly fine in this house. Jimin said that according to the latest updates, he thinks they're at least four hours away, and they definitely have more important things to prioritize than looking for you. Besides, Iâm here, and Iâm prepared this time so no oneâs getting to you, okay?â
He nudges you softly with his shoulder. You nod shakily, trying to breathe calmly. For a while, you sit there on his bedroom floor, next to each other, until the worst passes. He makes it better; the feeling of his arm gently pressed against yours, the sound of his quiet breaths, and the scent of his cologne all pull you out of a darkness.
âWe should do something.â
A lot calmer, you turn your head to meet his eyes, reflecting once again over how kind they look. Thereâs an additional sparkle in there too.
âDo⊠what?â
He stands up, holding out his hand for you. âCome on.â
A bit skeptical, you still give in and take his hand, letting him help you up. He doesnât explain whatever plan heâs got, but you follow him into the kitchen where he stops.
âTeach me how to bake?â
âJeongguk⊠Iâm not a baker, myself,â you look at him, confused.
âBut you baked those cookies? And they were good?â
âYeah, I followed a recipe and had a bit of luck. Wouldnât know how to replicate that without the exact instructions. I only know how to bake, like, one thing, and the last time I tried, it turned out terrible.â
âAnd that is?â
âOkay, uhm, eggs? And⊠butter?â
You watch as Jeongguk opens the fridge, searching for the ingredients you list.
âAnd weâll need flour, baking soda, sugar, and⊠Iâm guessing you donât have vanilla extract?â
He places a cartoon of eggs and a stick of butter on the kitchen table before looking at you with a guilty face. â...No.â
âAlright, well, I guess we can do without. But weâll need the flour, baking soda, and sugar; you have that?â
âComing right up.â
You roll your eyes with a smile on your lips as you place his laptop on the counter, not displaying a recipe but a Netflix documentary.
Jeongguk follows your directions flawlessly, except for âaccidentallyâ making somewhat of a flour mess and tasting just a little too much of the batter. The cupcakes go inside the preheated oven, and he starts cleaning the kitchen and doing the dishes in the meantime. Although your creations are a tad bit too dry for your liking, and you have to stop Jeongguk from popping an entire one into his mouth the second theyâre out of the oven, you guess he succeeded because you donât spare the dwindling rain any more thought.
At least not until youâve closed the laptop and put the cupcakes in the fridge, turning the lights off in the kitchen. Youâve joked and laughed, but now that itâs quiet⊠You bite your lip, standing outside your room with your fingers on the handle of the half open door.
âEverything okay?â
You turn your head, meeting Jeonggukâs eyes. Heâs stopped on the way to his own bedroom, and you make an effort to smile at him, âYeah. I probably wonât be able to sleep⊠with the rain, but itâs okay.â
âSleep with me in my bed?â
You canât help the risk analysis your brain performs. Itâs the concept of laying your unconscious body in an extremely vulnerable state next to a being much bigger and five times stronger than you, whose kind you know to be extremely violent and without a trace of empathy. But Jeongguk has had plenty of chances to hurt you, and in that way, he hasnât. He quite literally couldâve murdered you when you fell asleep against him on the couch and didnât even wake up fully when he carried you to bed.
âOkay,â you nod, taking the leap and watching him smile and continue to his room.
You change in your own room, emerging in a pair of baby blue cotton shorts and a white, loose t-shirt. Jeongguk is wearing a similar outfit, only his shorts are longer and his entire outfit is black, and heâs pulling away the bedspread as you enter his bedroom. Despite just spending hours with him, your heart rate increases.
He looks back at you over his shoulder. âYou know, Iâm sorry for making you sleep in bed with me back at the house. I thought you seemed uncomfortable because you were a little prudish, not becauseâŠâ
âBecause I was scared of you?â you continue, smiling softly at his confession.
He nods, and you see the way sadness fills his eyes.
âItâs okay. Thank you, though.â
Thereâs still a trace of hesitation in his eyes, so you roll your eyes playfully as you sit down on the bed. âGet in, Jeongguk.â
He follows your instructions, switching the lights off first, and though youâve slept beside him in the past, it feels so different. There was always a tension, mostly because you were quite literally fearing for your life, but also because you did find him insanely attractive.Â
In the middle of the night, you wake up to the bed moving and soon after feeling Jeongguk reach for you in a clumsy way that definitely means heâs not awake. With his arm around your waist, he pulls you back against him, nuzzling his face into your hair and sighing. Heâs really, really warm and sturdy, and you find that⊠it doesnât scare you that much. Not too long after, you feel him tense a little and start to pull back his arm, a sign that heâs awake and realizing what heâs done. Surely surprising himâand honestly, yourself tooâyou grasp his hand to keep it there, and a few beats of silence later, you feel him snuggle just a little closer.
When you wake up in Jeonggukâs warm, white sheets, youâre alone. Rolling over, you find yourself face to face with the ring, still on his bedside table. Should you ask him about that? (Or about how you basically cuddled?) Is it weird or are you overthinking stuff? You observe the shiny gold for a minute before you stretch your arms over your head and decide to get up.
After visiting the bathroom, you head toward the kitchen. Expecting Jeongguk to have left already, youâre surprised to see him at the kitchen table, still wearing the clothes he slept in.
âYouâre not going to the station today? I thought you had some sort of meetingâ you question, walking to the fridge to grab a cupcake and pour yourself a glass of apple juice.
Jeongguk puts his phone down, scraping the last of the cereal from the bowl in front of him onto the spoon. âMoved it to Wednesday. Thought Iâd stay home today.â
You wonder if itâs because of you and the bad day you had yesterday, but you donât voice your thoughts. Itâs still raining, but luckily there hasnât been any more thunder, and itâs supposed to last until tomorrow. Though, while you can handle ordinary rain, it feels⊠good to have him close by.
After breakfast, Jeongguk resumes working in his office. Youâre not really sure what to occupy yourself with, and although he left the door open, you donât want to disturb him.
You end up in the kitchen, inventorying the contents of the fridge, freezer, and cupboards. You used up the last of the butter when you made the cupcakes, and although there are a couple of eggs left, if you want to bake, you should probably get some more.
With a list in your phone, you knock on the open door to Jeonggukâs office.
âCan I borrow the car? I was thinking of going grocery shopping.â
He turns to you in the chair, leaning back. âAre we out of something? I went not too long ago and thought I got everything?â
âI want to try baking some more.â
From confused, his features turn to understanding.
âYeah, of course. I have the bike in case I get called in,â he turns back to the computer screen, clicking around. âHold on a minute, and Iâll get my card.â
You pull the door closer to your body. âItâs alright, Iâll pay.â
Jeongguk swirls the chair all the way to face you and stands up before you, looking down at you, âI donât mind, though.â
âJeongguk, youâre very kind, but itâs not like Iâm without pay. I can pay for some things while living in your house.â
âI know, but you still pay rent for your own apartment that you canât live in at the moment, you pay for your car you canât safely use, and I know you wouldnât be here if you didnât really have to, so in a sense, youâre paying that price as well. And itâs partially because of me. Just let me pay.â
âYouâre stubborn, you know that?â you roll your eyes but let him pass you into the hallway.
âIn a good way, I hope,â he calls out.Â
You follow him, taking the car key and card he just pulled out of his wallet from his hand. âAnd please just use it. Iâll check.â
âFine.â
He grins happily, and then he returns to his office. But the jokeâs on him because you do use his card at the grocery store, but you also take the opportunity to fill the car up with gas, and for that, you pay with your own card.
Itâs just past noon when you return, locking the car in the garage and carrying the grocery bags inside. You notice the empty office on your way to the kitchen, and doesnât it seem very⊠quiet? Then again, wasnât the bike still in the garage?
You bring the groceries to the kitchen, unpacking everything before checking your phone again. If Jeongguk left he wouldâve at least texted you, right? When thereâs no notification from him, you conclude that he must be somewhere in the house, so you set out to find him.
You peer into his bedroom, finding it empty just like his office. Next, you open the door into your room, but he isnât there either. That leaves, what, the bathroom?
The door to the bathroom is ajar, and as you approach, you see movement inside. Jeongguk stands with his back toward the door, sorting and throwing laundry into the washing machine. The final item he decides to wash is the shirt heâs currently wearing, and you watch him reach his hands to the back of his neck and then pull the black shirt over his head.
Which means that heâs left shirtless.
He places it in the washing machine and closes the door to it, unknowing of the way your heart has filled with an incredible weight, and you press your lips together in order to stop the bottom one from trembling.
The night that you almost diedâJeongguk more so than youâsometimes feels so distant. Like a terrible dream or something from another lifetime. But youâre now cruelly reminded by the large, very pink and ugly scar close to his shoulder blade.
Heâs about to start the machine when he turns around as if he forgot something, worry filling his eyes and coloring his face when he spots you, on the brink of crying.
It doesnât help you much, though, because thereâs another huge, pink scar on his chest as well, spanning from right above where his heart should be and down a few inches.
You remember how he used to look when he couldnât ever be bothered to wear a shirt around the fake house; how his warm, essentially flawless skin looked under the summer sun. And now, itâs going to look like that for the rest of his life. Because of you. You couldâve moved out of the way when Hoseong rushed toward you with the sword, but you didnât. You couldâve at least tried, but you hadnât.
âJeongguk,â you whisper, distraught, taking a few steps toward him. He looks at you as you reach your hand out carefully, but he makes no effort to stop you, so you ghost your shaky fingers over the scar on his chest, as if it still hurts him.
âIâIâŠâ
âHey, itâs fine, okay?â he tries to meet your eyes, but you keep them on the scar, âIt doesnât hurt.â
He couldâve died. He was so, so close to dying. You nod, but your lip trembles as you tilt your head.Â
âListen⊠Iâm fine⊠Theyâre just scars. Iâm not bothered by them. Not at all; I donât think about them. I can barely see them.â
Your gaze drifts, and you spot another scar on the side of his ribcage. âAnd this? I donât remember this?â
He lifts his arm a little, giving you a better view of it. Luckily, itâs not close to as big as the others. âThis,â he says, touching his other hand to raised, pink skin, âis from the chest tube. The others are from, well, the sword and fixing my ribs and my lung.â
In order to get your attention, Jeongguk places two fingers under your chin and lifts it to search your eyes, âIâm okay, I promise. The doctors told me not to exert myself like I used to for a while, so Iâm still taking it a little easy, but Iâll definitely be able to.â
You grab his hand, holding it tightly in the air between you. âYouâll be completely fine?â
âYes. I mostly am already. Iâm like 99%.â
You think about the damage the sword did to his body, and if he hadnât taken the blow for you, Hoseong wouldâve aimed it for your heart, and it wouldâve pierced your body. It hurts just thinking about it.
Closing your eyes for a second, you nod softly before gently turning him around again to look at the scar on his shoulder blade. He lets you, standing patiently with his back to you.Â
âHave you tried any of those oils?â you sniffle.
âOils?â
âThat make them less noticeable.â
âI havenât,â he answers over his shoulder. âI donât think itâll help since theyâre so⊠textured. But if itâs just for appearance, I donât mind. They donât bother me.â
âIt doesnât hurt?â you ask to make sure, letting your fingers touch his skin still very lightly but less so than the previous ghosting touch.
He shakes his head, turning it forward again as if giving you free reign.
You trace the scar, the long vertical, raised line that thickens more to the middle. Youâve never seen scars like this before, not where you can even make out the stitches. For a moment, you stand there in silence.
âWhy didnât you tell me about your work?â you ask quietly.
He turns his head to the side, âWhat do you mean?â
âBack at the house, when I essentially yelled at you for being a shitty cop and about the patriarchy. Jimin said you worked a lot of domestic violence and sexual assault cases, like⊠voluntarily. Why didnât you tell me that? Why did you let me go on and on about womenâs rights and police violence and abuse when you were actually trying to do good?â
Jeongguk shrugs lightly, âWould it have helped? In the moment?â
You think about it, letting your hand fall from his back. He turns around and leans back against the washing machine, his hands on top of it behind him.
âI probably wouldnât have believed you.â
It wouldnât have helped. You were angryâfuriousâand upset, and it wouldn't have changed anything because you wouldâve thought he was lying. Lying and somehow trying to invalidate your feelings.
âI had the feeling you needed to vent. I sorta realized then what your impression of me was, and I felt like I understood you more in that moment as well.â He tilts his head, looking down at you with those kind, brown eyes and a small smile.
âThat I wasnât a fake feminist, using the movement for my own personal and professional advantage? And that I actually thought you were the most misogynistic asshole to ever live, not just throwing blame around to victimize myself?â
Jeongguk chuckles at your colorful description, âYeah.â
Even so, he still looks so⊠sweet.
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author's note: so i hope you like this spontaneous april fools' prank lol. i'm also really, really hoping that if you did like it that maybe you'll leave a reblog or an ask with your thoughts? makes my day to hear if you liked it (and what you liked)!!
one time for the present, two time for the past âȘ
JIMIN, TAEHYUNG & JUNGKOOK
I am hungry for touch & ashamed to be looked at
â Safia Elhillo, from "Summer," Girls That Never Die
floof
â Heaven, Mieko Kawakami
[text ID: I knew that it was cruel to be so optimistic, but, in my solitude, I couldn't resist the urge and spent entire days basking in idiotic fantasies, sometimes verging on prayer.]
I WANT TO CRY AND LAUGH AT THE SAME TIME
230121 - casabrutus on twitter