#yohan tiny
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We all know BYH spends so much time at the gym but why does he look so pocket sized as Jeongwoo? T~T
#black out#in the second gif he looks like a tiny lego character#I wanna pat him on the head and put him in my pocket#if i were sangcheol It wouldn’t take me that long to fall for him#I mean I would break his record#byun yohan#ko jeongwoo#snow white must die#백설공주에게 죽음을#*my gifs
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🐰🥕
#wei#weiedit#yohan#kim yohan#ruicentral#kflops#kiwitracks#oorieri#useroro#ribbitashie#tuserchrissy#usersrin#!melstuff#imera#bunnyboy 🐰💞#bottom left was so funny sfkdhjbrfdjklk#dumbass (affectionate)#feeling perfectly normal about him btw#especially top right... when he :] (in tiny).. i go 🫠😭
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Another thing about ep 5: Ms Ji did not hesitate to call the sexual abuser a son of a bitch to Gaon's face, I wonder if she's a bit of a pottymouth outside of her work setting 😭 or maybe during it too, when Elijah is not around. Or even earlier: younger Isaac hearing Yohan say something 5yos should not be saying when he drops a toy or something and going "who taught you this ????". Well. Nanny did. Accidentally.
#the devil judge#tdj thoughts#additionally im sure yohan has some traits he takes from Ms Ji#she raised him ! he has to have absorbed some things from her#mannerisms or attitude or else#which is making me think#isaac yohan and elijah are Ms Ji's kids :( she raised them all since they were so tiny#xyz
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𝐃𝐎𝐔𝐁𝐋𝐄 𝐓𝐑𝐎𝐔𝐁𝐋𝐄 (p.sh)

PAIRING: sunghoon x pregnant!reader (f)
SUMMARY: when the two pink lines appeared on the pregnancy test, the life you had so meticulously built crumbled. but sunghoon gathered the pieces back together, shaping a new life with your two babies.
WARNINGS: pregnancy, suggestive and mentions of sex (no smut), angst (if you squint?), fluff, crack by the end, sunghoon is so caring, their love makes me puke, description of labour and a c-section (i gathered my knowledge from grace anatomy), reader worries a lot, sunghoon works hard, twins (yohan and haneul), bed rest, a little complication with one of the babies, happy ending, pet names (babe, baby), lmk if more. NOT PROOFREAD.
PUBLISHED: 3rd March 2025
WC: 6.5k
TAGLIST: @stolasisyourparent @jaeyunsbimbo @jwnghyuns @bangtancultsposts @shawnyle @jooniesbears-blog @skzenhalove @ro-diaries @onlyhyunjin @xcosmi @strawberrhypen @heeheeswifey @jakeflvrz @astratlantis @tunafishyfishylike @branchrkive @insommni4 @kirinaa08 @leiclerc @nxzz-skz @laurradoesloveu @beomluvrr @heeshlove @17ericas @riribelle @cloud-lyy @enhamonsterghoul @star-hoon (oneshot) @starry-eyed-bimbo @saphiranishimurashan @jkslvsnella @vrusha01 @notcamii @deluluscenarios @m1kkso @youngheejay @lovingvoidgoatee @motherscrustytoenailclippings @sukisvr @yoonzns @kayjiguki @12e45 @irahina @geniejunn BOLDS COULD NOT BE TAGGED.
NOW PLAYING: Unconditionally by Katy Perry.
a/n: i hope y’all like this, please REBLOG to share and stay tuned for the other members’ fics. <3 sorry for any grammar error, i’m sleep deprived. anw, do you think i should make a small drabble when the twins are older too? lmk.
You hadn’t planned for this. No one really does, do they?
One month ago, you were just a college student, studying hard, dreaming of the future, with your boyfriend, Sunghoon, by your side.
The two of you were inseparable, sharing classes, meals, and the occasional late-night walk around campus when life felt too overwhelming.
You thought you had time. time to grow, to figure things out, to live freely before settling into something serious.
But life had other plans.
When you found out you were pregnant, it hit you like a train.
You remembered sitting on the cold bathroom floor of your dorm, clutching the positive test in your trembling hands, staring at it until the lines blurred from your tears.
The first thing you thought about wasn’t yourself but Sunghoon.
What would he say? What would he do? Would he be scared, angry… relieved?
He wasn’t any of those things.
When you told him, he just pulled you into his arms, held you so tightly you thought you’d break, and whispered over and over that he loved you. That he’d take care of you. That you’d figure this out together.
But love wasn’t enough to stop reality from crashing down.
The college didn’t offer much sympathy.
As soon as you dropped out—because there was no way you could keep up with tuition and prepare for a baby—they kicked you out of the dorm. No exceptions.
You weren’t a student anymore, so you didn’t belong. It didn’t matter that you’d lived there for years.
You packed up what little you had, stuffing clothes and textbooks into worn-out suitcases while Sunghoon silently paced the small room, phone pressed to his ear as he tried to find somewhere — anywhere — for the two of you to go.
By some miracle, he did.
It wasn’t much. A tiny apartment on the outskirts of the city, far from campus, far from everything you knew.
The rent was low because the building was old and falling apart, but it had four walls, a roof, and running water. It was home.
Sunghoon tried to stay strong. He was a student, just like you had been, with assignments and exams and his own dreams.
But those dreams had been put on hold— at least, the version of them he once had. Now, instead of studying in the library with his friends, he was filling out job applications.
Instead of thinking about internships or grad school, he was wondering how to pay for diapers and formula.
He landed a part-time job at a convenience store after a week of searching, and though he came home every night exhausted and smelling like instant noodles and cold air, he always kissed you softly and asked how you were feeling, if the babies were okay.
Babies. Plural.
That had been another shock, one you’d gotten at your first ultrasound: Two little heartbeats. Two little lives.
You’d cried then, too. Half out of fear, half out of something that felt a little like awe. Sunghoon had cried with you, holding your hand so tightly his knuckles went white, whispering that it would be okay.
And you believed him. For a little while.
But things were hard.
The convenience store paycheck wasn’t enough, not when rent, groceries, and prenatal visits drained it so quickly. And even if your parents managed to send you their savings, it still was too little for prenatal vitamins and all the things you had to buy for when the twins would be born.
Sunghoon started losing sleep, staying up late to study after work, waking up early to make it to class, and somehow still managing to hold you when you couldn’t stop crying because your body was changing faster than you could handle, because you felt like a burden, because you were terrified.
You wanted to find a job too. You tried.
But no one wanted to hire a pregnant woman, not even when you were only two months along.
You didn’t even look pregnant, not really but employers seemed to know, somehow. They’d glance at your belly, at your tired eyes, and find a reason to turn you away.
“We’ll call you,” they’d say. They never did.
It was unfair. You were competent, you had your high school diploma. You could work, you could help. but no one would let you.
Sunghoon told you it was okay. That you should rest. That you were doing enough by taking care of yourself and the babies.
But you saw the way he clenched his jaw when he checked his bank account. You saw the exhaustion in his eyes, the frustration he tried to hide.
One night, after a particularly long shift, he came home, threw his keys on the kitchen counter, and just… broke.
“I can’t do this,” he whispered, leaning against the wall, head in his hands. “I’m trying, but it’s not enough… it’s never enough.”
You’d never seen him like that before. Sunghoon was always calm, always steady, the one who grounded you when you felt like you were falling apart.
But now he was the one unraveling, and you didn’t know how to help.
You went to him, kneeling beside him on the cold tile floor, and took his hands in yours “We’ll figure it out,” you whispered, echoing the words he’d once said to you. “We’ll find a way.”
He just shook his head. “I don’t want you to worry about this, you shouldn’t have to.”
“I already do,” you admitted, your voice soft but firm. “I worry every day, about you, about the babies, about what’s going to happen to us. But we’re in this together, Hoon, you’re not alone.”
And maybe that was what he needed to hear.
Because he pulled you into his arms, burying his face in your shoulder, and for the first time in a long time, you both let yourselves be scared.
And somehow, in the middle of all the fear and exhaustion, there were moments of happiness.
Late-night talks in bed, Sunghoon’s hand resting on your belly, feeling the faintest flutter of movement. The way he looked at you, like you were the most precious thing in the world, even when you felt anything but.
It wasn’t the life you’d imagined. But it was a fresh start, and you were going to make it work.
⪩⪨.
The chemistry between you and Sunghoon didn’t die, not even with the exhaustion, the stress, or the growing weight of reality pressing down on you both.
If anything, it seemed to shift into something deeper, more intimate.
Perhaps it was the hormones, or maybe it was the way Sunghoon looked at you— like you were made of glass and fire all at once.
There were nights when you’d reach for him, despite everything, when your body burned with a desperate, aching need that you couldn’t ignore.
It was embarrassing at first — how could you think about sex when there was so much to worry about? But Sunghoon never made you feel ashamed.
Even when he was exhausted, after long shifts at the convenience store and nights spent studying, if you whispered his name softly enough, he’d turn to you, his tired eyes softening, and touch you so gently it made you want to cry.
“You sure?” he’d ask, voice husky with sleep, his thumb tracing circles on your hip.
And when you nodded, needy and aching, he’d love you slowly, sweetly, like you were something precious.
His hands, rough from work and cold from the night air, would warm against your skin, spreading goosebumps as they moved over your growing belly, your curves softening into something maternal and foreign to you both.
“I love you,” he’d whisper, over and over, like a promise.
And when it was over, he’d hold you, tracing patterns on your back until you fell asleep, his hand never leaving your stomach, like he needed to feel all three of you were still there.
Still his.
⪩⪨.
You hated feeling useless. No matter how many times Sunghoon told you to rest, to take care of yourself and the babies, the guilt sat heavy on your chest; a constant reminder that while he was out there working himself to the bone, you were at home, waiting.
So, you kept looking for a job.
And eventually, you found one.
It wasn’t much: a small corner café, tucked away in the older part of town.
The owner, a kind older woman named Mrs. Park, had taken one look at you and seemed to understand without you having to say a word.
She didn’t ask about the pregnancy, didn’t ask why you were looking for work so urgently. She just handed you an apron and asked if you could start the next morning.
You said yes before she could change her mind.
The hours were short, just enough to bring home a small paycheck without overworking yourself. Between morning sickness, aching feet, and the constant hum of anxiety, you managed.
The work kept your mind busy, and the extra money, small as it was, helped. anything to lighten the weight on Sunghoon’s shoulders.
The best part was the way his face lit up when you handled him your first paycheck, small and wrinkled from being folded into your pocket all day.
“You didn’t have to…” he whispered, holding the check like it was made of gold.
“I know,” you said, leaning up to kiss him softly. “But I wanted to.”
He didn’t say anything after that, just pulled you into his arms, holding you tightly enough that you felt the tremor in his hands.
Money was still tight.
You became an expert at stretching every dollar, buying second-hand things for the babies: clothes, a crib, even a stroller someone had listed online for half the price.
You cleaned everything, scrubbed it down until it looked new, and though it wasn’t the Pinterest-perfect nursery you’d once dreamed of, but it was enough.
⪩⪨.
The fifth month of pregnancy crept up on you quietly, like the tide rolling in, soft and inevitable, until one day you looked in the mirror and saw someone entirely new.
Your belly had grown, round and firm, stretched with the weight of the two tiny humans inside you. It was impossible to hide anymore.
You were blooming.
Despite the morning sickness that still lingered some days, and the exhaustion that settled into your bones like a permanent guest, there was something undeniably radiant about you now.
Your skin glowed, cheeks flushed with a soft pink hue, and your hair became somehow shinier and thicker.
Even your eyes seemed brighter, though you chalk that up to getting more sleep now that you weren’t balancing school and work.
“Wow, pregnancy looks good on you,” Mrs. Park had said one morning at the café, handing you a fresh cup of chamomile tea instead of the coffee you so desperately wanted.
You had laughed, shaking your head, brushing flour off your apron. “I feel like a beached whale.”
“You look like a goddess,” she insisted, patting your arm gently before returning to the kitchen.
It wasn’t just her, either. Customers complimented you more often now, commenting on your “glow,” asking when you were due, if you knew the genders yet.
Some people even touched your belly without asking, which drove you insane, but you bit your tongue and smiled through it, knowing they meant well.
Still, no amount of glowing or compliments could change the fact that you were tired.
All the time.
Your body ached in ways you hadn’t anticipated. Your back throbbed almost constantly, the strain of carrying twins becoming more obvious with each passing week.
Walking more than a few blocks left you breathless, and your feet… Lord, your feet.
They swelled like balloons by the end of every day, tight and aching, even when you sat down as much as possible at work.
You’d become clumsy, too. You knocked things over more than once at the café, sending cups crashing to the floor, apologizing profusely as you bent down (with great effort) to clean up the mess.
“Don’t worry about it,” Mrs. Park always said, shooing you away. “Go sit down for a minute. You’re carrying two humans, for heaven’s sake.”
When you got home from work, you always tried to clean the apartment before Sunghoon came back.
It was small, but you wanted it to feel like a home, not just a temporary place you were stuck in. You’d make the bed, wipe down the tiny kitchen counters, and vacuum the living room—all while trying not to collapse from exhaustion.
Sometimes, you’d manage to cook dinner too, though more often than not, you just ordered something cheap and easy, feeling guilty but knowing you couldn’t push yourself too hard.
Sunghoon never complained.
When he came home, usually around sunset, the door would creak open, and you heard the familiar sound of his keys hitting the small bowl by the entrance.
“Babe?” he called, voice soft but tired.
“In here,” you answered from the couch, where you’d usually ended up, legs propped up on a pillow to help with the swelling.
He appeared in the doorway, still in his uniform from the convenience store, black slacks and a button-up shirt, a little wrinkled, smelling faintly of coffee and instant ramen. His hair tousled from the wind, dark eyes warm but weary.
Without fail, he smiled the moment he saw you.
“Hey,” he said, crossing the room to kneel beside you, pressing a kiss to your temple, then your belly. “How are my girls?”
You rolled your eyes, but the smile came anyway. “Or boys.”
“Or one of each,” he teased, hands gentle as they splayed over your bump, feeling for any kicks.
“How was work?”
He sighed, leaning his head against your shoulder, closing his eyes for a moment. “Long… some guy tried to shoplift again, i’m starting to think I should charge admission fees for all the chaos.”
You laughed softly, fingers brushing through his hair, knowing how much he hated that job but how hard he was trying to keep it for you, for the babies.
“I made dinner,” you said, though ‘made’ meant heating the leftovers you had in th fridge.
“Mhh,” he murmured, already half-asleep against you. “I’d rather eat you. Cheaper and more delicious.”
You smacked his head lightly “You’re almost collapsing, go eat, Hoon.”
“Alright,” he kissed your cheek and got up, moving towards the kitchen “But I’ll have you as a dessert!”
⪩⪨.
Nights were the hardest.
Your body ached more at night, your back screaming every time you tried to find a comfortable position in bed.
You’d toss and turn, sometimes getting up to walk around the apartment because lying down just hurt too much.
Sunghoon always noticed, even when you tried to be quiet.
One night, around three in the morning, you were sitting at the kitchen table, drinking water and rubbing your lower back, when you heard him shuffle out of bed.
“Babe?” His voice was thick with sleep, hair sticking up in every direction.
“Sorry,” you whispered. “I couldn’t sleep.”
Without a word, he walked over, stood behind you, and began to massage your shoulders, his thumbs pressing gently into the knots that seemed permanent these days.
“You don’t have to…”
“I want to,” he murmured, pressing a soft kiss to the top of your head.
His hands were warm and firm, working down your back slowly, easing the tension until you melted against him, sighing softly.
“You okay?” he asked after a while, his chin resting on your shoulder.
“Yeah,” you whispered, eyes closing as you leaned into his warmth. “Just… tired.”
“I know,” he said quietly, his hands never stopping their slow, comforting motion. “You’re amazing, you know that?”
You let out a soft, breathy laugh. “I feel like a whale.”
“You’re beautiful,” he insisted, his voice so sincere it made your throat tighten. “You’re carrying our babies, that’s… incredible.”
You turned your head slightly, just enough to brush your lips against his.
It was soft, warm, and lingering, a kiss that spoke of gratitude, of love, of something deeper than either of you had words for.
“Come back to bed,” he whispered.
And when you did, he wrapped himself around you, one arm under your belly, supporting its weight, the other tangled in your hair. His body was warm, steady, grounding.
You fell asleep like that, safe and held, and for a little while, all the worry, all the exhaustion, all the fear melted away.
⪩⪨.
By the seventh month, everything changed.
Your doctor had been gentle, but firm, when she sat you down after your check-up, her eyes soft with concern.
“I’m putting you on immediate bed rest,” she said, her voice leaving no room for argument. “Your body is straining too hard, and with twins, that’s dangerous, iknow you’ve been trying to push through, but if you keep this up, there’s a high risk of preterm labor —or worse.”
“Worse?” you had repeated, barely above a whisper.
The idea of something happening to your babies was too much to comprehend.
You felt your chest tighten, your hands instinctively cradling your belly as though you could protect them from the world with just that small gesture.
“I’ll give you a list of things you need like vitamins and supplements, carrying two is an enormous strain, and I want you and the babies safe.”
You hadn’t argued. You were too scared to argue.
You’d complied immediately, even though it meant using some of the money you and Sunghoon had saved for the babies. money that was supposed to go toward diapers, formula, a proper crib.
Instead, you’d bought the prenatal vitamins your doctor insisted on, the ones you’d been avoiding because they were expensive and you thought you could get by without them.
When you told Sunghoon, he didn’t complain.
“We’ll figure it out,” he’d said that night, after helping you into bed, his hand warm and steady against your swollen belly. “You’re not going to worry about money right now, i’ll pick up more shifts.”
“But—”
“No.” his voice was gentle but firm, leaving no room for protest. “I mean it. I’ll handle it… for them.”
He always said ‘for them,’ and that was all it took to silence your guilt.
Even Mrs. Park, kind as ever, had understood. When you called to tell her you couldn’t come to work anymore, your voice shaking with apology, she stopped you before you could even finish.
“Sweetheart, don’t you dare apologize. You’re having twins! Focus on your health, and don’t be afraid to ask if you need anything.”
You’d cried after that call,not out of sadness, but out of gratitude.
A week into bed rest, you found out the genders.
The ultrasound revealed it clearly— one boy and one girl. You hadn’t realized how emotional you’d be until you saw their tiny forms on the screen, moving, kicking, their hearts beating strong and fast.
“They’re healthy,” the technician had said with a smile, pointing out their little hands, their spines, the curve of their heads.
In the cab ride home, you and Sunghoon sat in stunned, happy silence, hands clasped tightly together over your belly.
Later that night, lying in bed, you’d brought up names.
“I want their names to match,” you murmured, your head on Sunghoon’s chest, listening to the steady rhythm of his heart, your own hands tracing the curve of your belly.
“Like… rhyme?” he asked, sounding a little amused, his fingers lazily playing with your hair, “Not rhyme, just… sound good together, you know?”
He hummed thoughtfully. “Okay, uhm, Do you like Yohan?”
You looked up at him, surprised. “Yohan?”
“Yeah. For the boy.” You let the name roll around in your mind, “I like it,” you whispered.
“And for the girl?” he asked, looking down at you, waiting.
You thought for a long moment. “Haneul.”
His lips curved into a soft smile. “Yohan and Haneul.”
“Yohan and Haneul,” you repeated, the names fitting together like puzzle pieces, like they were always meant to be spoken side by side.
“Perfect,” he whispered, pressing a gentle kiss to your forehead. “They’re going to be perfect.”
Bed rest, however, was not perfect.
You knew it was necessary, you wanted to do everything in your power to keep your babies safe, but that didn’t make it any easier.
Sitting on the couch all day, only to move back to the bed or the kitchen chair, made you restless and bored out of your mind.
You felt horrible, especially knowing Sunghoon was working harder than ever to keep everything together.
He had picked up more shifts at the convenience store, working late into the night, coming home exhausted but still smiling, still touching your belly and asking how “his little ones” were doing.
You tried to keep the apartment clean as best you could from your limited range like folding laundry from the couch, wiping down surfaces slowly, feeling winded even from that.
One evening, Sunghoon came home to find you trying to sweep the floor, your back screaming in protest, your belly making it hard to even bend slightly.
“What are you doing?” he asked, immediately taking the broom from your hands.
“…cleaning.”
“You’re supposed to be resting.”
“I can’t just sit around all day, Sunghoon.” You snapped, harsher than intended.
He sighed, setting the broom aside, and took your hands gently in his, guiding you to sit back on the couch.
“You’re growing two humans inside you,” he reminded you softly, kneeling in front of you, his hands warm against your knees. “That’s not useless, that’s… everything.”
You blinked, your throat tight, feeling tears threaten to spill over.
Damn pregnancy hormones.
“I just… I hate seeing you do everything,” you whispered.
“I don’t mind,” he said, and you could tell he meant it. “I love you, I love them.”
You reached out, your fingers brushing through his hair, and he leaned into your touch like he always did, eyes fluttering closed for a brief moment of peace.
“I’m so tired,” you admitted softly.
“I know,” he whispered, pressing a kiss t your belly. “I know, baby.”
⪩⪨.
The pain came fast and without warning.
One moment, you were shifting uncomfortably on the couch, rubbing circles over your swollen belly, trying to ease the dull ache in your back.
The next, a sharp, unbearable pressure shot through you, like your entire body was twisting in on itself.
You gasped, hands flying to your stomach.
The next contraction came even harder, stealing the breath from your lungs. Your vision blurred as panic set in.
Your phone. Where was your phone?
With trembling hands, you fumbled around the couch cushions until you found it, barely able to press the call button before another wave of pain wracked through you.
The dial tone rang endlessly in your ears before Sunghoon’s voice finally cut through.
“Hey, baby, what’s—”
“Sunghoon,” you choked out, voice shaking. “It’s happening.”
Silence. “What?”
“The babies—” You couldn’t even get the words out properly.
You were panting, your whole body trembling, the pain stretching and pulling in ways that made you want to scream. “You need to come home, please.”
“I’m on my way,” he said immediately, his voice tight.
You could hear the sound of his chair scraping back, the muffled voices of his classmates as he grabbed his things in a rush. “Stay on the phone with me, are you in pain?”
“Yes,” you whimpered, squeezing your eyes shut as another contraction hit.
“Baby, you need to breathe,” he said, his voice urgent but gentle. “In through your nose, out through your mouth, you remember what the doctor said, right? Just focus on that until I get there.”
You tried. You really did. But the pain was overwhelming, and all you could do was grip the armrest of the couch, gasping through each agonizing wave.
Minutes stretched into eternity before you finally heard the sound of the front door slamming open.
“Y/N?” Sunghoon’s voice was frantic as he rushed to your side, immediately crouching down in front of you.
His hands found your face, your belly, anywhere he could touch to ground you.
“I can’t—” You broke off, biting back a sob. “It hurts, Sunghoon.”
“I know, baby,” he murmured, pressing a kiss to your forehead, his own breath shaky. “But we need to go, okay? Can you stand?”
You nodded weakly, though your legs felt like jelly. Sunghoon slipped an arm around your waist, practically lifting you off the couch as he guided you toward the door.
Each step sent another sharp wave of pain through you, and by the time you reached the car, you were sobbing into his shoulder.
“It’s okay,” he kept whispering. “I’ve got you,.”
The drive to the hospital was a blur of pain and panic.
Sunghoon gripped the wheel so tightly his knuckles turned white, running every red light, ignoring every honk and shout from passing cars. Every few seconds, he’d glance over at you, his face lined with worry.
“You’re doing so good, baby,” he kept saying, even when you were barely holding yourself together. “We’re almost there. Just hold on for me, okay?”
When you finally arrived, nurses swarmed around you, wheeling you through the halls while Sunghoon ran beside the gurney, his hand never leaving yours.
“She’s having twins,” he told them, his voice strained. “She’s in labour, please, you have to help her.”
They nodded, moving quickly, and before you knew it, you were in a hospital bed, strapped to monitors, IVs in your arm, the sterile scent of antiseptic filling your nose.
The contractions were coming faster now, sharper, stronger, making your whole body arch off the bed in pain.
“It hurts,” you sobbed, gripping Sunghoon’s hand so tight you were sure you’d break his fingers.
“I’m sorry, baby” he whispered, pressing frantic kisses to your damp forehead. “You”re doing great.”
The doctor came in moments later, her face grave. “You’re not dilating fast enough,” she said. “And with twins, we can’t risk waiting, ae need to perform a C-section.”
Your heart stopped.
“No,” you gasped, shaking your head. “I— I don’t want—”
“Y/N,” Sunghoon whispered, his forehead pressed against yours. “It’s going to be okay.”
“I don’t want to be cut open,” you sobbed. “Sunghoon, please—”
His hands cradled your face, his thumbs wiping away your tears. “I know, I know,” he murmured, his voice shaking. “But we have to do what’s best for them, okay? I promise I’ll be right there the whole time.”
You searched his eyes desperately, finding nothing but love, worry, and unwavering determination.
You nodded, swallowing down your fear.
They prepped you quickly, the spinal anesthesia numbing you from the waist down, but the fear still clawed at your chest.
Sunghoon was right beside you, wearing scrubs over his clothes, his hand gripping yours tightly.
“You’re doing so good,” he whispered, pressing a kiss to your temple. “I’m so proud of you, baby.”
You barely felt it when they made the incision, but you felt the pressure, the pulling, the strange sensation of something being moved inside you.
And then—
A cry. Loud and strong.
Your heart clenched as they lifted Yohan into the air, his tiny fists flailing, his lungs filled with life.
“A boy,” the doctor said, smiling. “A very strong little boy.”
Tears blurred your vision as you watched the nurse wrap him in a blanket. He was perfect. Tiny, but perfect.
But then—something was wrong.
Haneul wasn’t crying.
Your breath hitched. You turned to Sunghoon, his face pale with fear.
“Why isn’t she crying?” you asked, panic creeping into your voice.
The doctor was already working, her expression serious as she cleared her airway, checked her vitals.
Seconds stretched into eternity before… A weak, but definite, wail.
Your entire body sagged with relief.
“She’s small,” the doctor said. “She needs monitoring, but she’s here.”
“She’s here,” Sunghoon echoed, his voice breaking.
By the time they stitched you up and wheeled you to recovery, it was just the four of you.
You were exhausted, barely able to keep your eyes open, but you watched as Sunghoon cradled Yohan in his arms, his eyes filled with pure love.
“She looks like you,” he whispered, glancing at Haneul, who was wrapped up in a tiny incubator beside your bed.
You let out a weak laugh. “She looks like you, too.”
He leaned down, pressing a soft kiss to your lips. “I love you,” he murmured. “Thank you for giving me them.”
Tears slipped down your cheeks as you reached for his hand, squeezing weakly.
“I would have never made it without you,” you whispered.
⪩⪨.
The first few days were harder than anything you could have imagined.
Your body was broken, stitched together but still aching, bruised, raw.
Every movement sent sharp, burning pain through your abdomen, making even the simplest tasks feel impossible. And yet, you had no choice, there were two tiny humans depending on you.
Two.
The weight of it was crushing. You were a mother now, not just to one baby, but two. Yohan and Haneul.
They were small, fragile, barely able to hold up their own heads, and they needed you every second of the day.
But you were exhausted.
Completely, utterly drained.
The moment you stepped foot into the small apartment, holding Haneul while Sunghoon carried Yohan in his arms, you felt the overwhelming urge to collapse onto the bed and sleep for days.
Except you couldn’t.
Because the twins were already stirring, their tiny mouths opening and closing, their bodies wriggling in search of warmth and nourishment.
You barely had time to lower yourself onto the couch before the wailing started.
First Haneul, her tiny lungs stronger than you would’ve expected for how fragile she looked. Then Yohan, following his sister’s lead as if he had to compete for who could cry the loudest.
“Oh my God,” you groaned, pressing a hand over your face. “How are they so loud?”
Sunghoon, looking just as exhausted, stared down at Yohan with wide eyes. “Do we… do we rock them?”
“No, let’s just leave them to cry themselves to sleep,” you deadpanned.
Sunghoon shot you a look. “Alright, alright, picking them up now.”
He rocked Yohan awkwardly, bouncing him slightly, but the baby only cried harder.
You tried to do the same with Haneul, wincing as you shifted to hold her properly against your chest. Your stitches screamed in protest, and you had to bite back a whimper of pain.
“Shh, baby,” you whispered, rubbing her tiny back. “Please, just a few minutes of peace.”
Breastfeeding had been one of the most painful surprises of motherhood.
You had read about it, heard stories, but nothing prepared you for the sheer agony of tiny mouths latching onto already sore and swollen breasts.
Haneul latched on first, her tiny hands pressing against your skin. Yohan squirmed in Sunghoon’s arms, waiting for his turn impatiently.
“God, they eat like they haven’t been fed in years,” Sunghoon muttered, sitting beside you.
You snorted, adjusting Haneul in your arms as she sucked greedily. The pain was unbearable at first, but after a while, you barely noticed it, you were too tired to care.
Once she was done, you carefully passed her to Sunghoon, who traded her for Yohan.
Yohan latched on immediately, his tiny fingers curling into your skin.
Sunghoon stared at the two of you, his eyes soft. “You’re amazing, you know?”
You huffed. “Tell me that when I don’t feel like a cow being milked.”
He chuckled, gently rocking Haneul in his arms. “I mean it, you just gave birth a few days ago, and you’re already handling both of them.”
You wanted to tell him you weren’t handling anything. That you were barely holding yourself together, that you felt like crying every second of the day. But you just leaned against him, exhaling slowly.
“We’re trying,” you murmured.
“We’re a family.” he retorted.
The days blurred into an exhausting, sleepless cycle: Feed. Change diapers. Cry. Repeat.
Bathing them was a whole new challenge.
“We don’t even have a tub,” you groaned, staring at the two tiny and stinky babies.
Sunghoon scratched the back of his neck. “We could… fill the sink?”
You stared at him. “You want to bathe our newborn babies in the kitchen sink?”
He lifted his hands defensively. “It’s clean! And small enough for them.” You pinched the bridge of your nose. “Fine, Just don’t drop them.”
Sunghoon grinned. “I would never.”
Ten minutes later, he almost dropped Yohan.
“Sunghoon!” you yelped, catching the baby before he could slip further into the water.“I had him!” Sunghoon insisted, looking guilty.
“You did not have him.”
He cleared his throat, adjusting his hold on Yohan. “Maybe this is a two-person job.”
“No shit.”
Together, you managed to get both babies cleaned, even if it was a messy, wet, and chaotic experience.
By the time they were wrapped in towels and back in your arms, you felt ready to pass out.
Sunghoon flopped onto the couch beside you, letting out a heavy sigh. “I think we deserve a medal for that.”
“You deserve a lecture,” you muttered. “Honestly, I don’t know if I should trust you with our children.”
He pouted. “That hurts, babe.”
You rolled your eyes but leaned against him anyway, watching as Yohan and Haneul drifted off to sleep in your arms.
Sunghoon kissed your temple, his voice softer this time. “We’ll get better at this.”
“We have to,” you said. “They depend on us.”
“And we depend on each other.” He squeezed your hand. “We’re in this together, baby. Always.”
Always.
⪩⪨.
The twins were finally asleep.
You exhaled a deep, shaky breath as you slumped onto the couch, every muscle in your body aching from exhaustion. It had taken forever to get them down, rocking, shushing, feeding, changing diapers, starting over again when one cried and the other followed. But now, for a few precious hours, there was silence.
Sunghoon collapsed beside you, his head tilting back against the cushions. He let out a low groan, rubbing a hand down his face. “Holy shit, that was brutal.”
You huffed out a weak laugh. “I thought we were gonna die.”
He turned his head to look at you, smiling softly. “We can’t possibly be defeated by two itty bitty humans.”
You let your head fall against his shoulder, your eyes closing for a moment.
Your body reminded you of the pain you were still inn with a dull, persistent ache in your abdomen.
Sunghoon felt your wince before you even said anything. He shifted, glancing down at you with concern. “You okay?”
You swallowed, opening your eyes. “Scar still hurts.”
His lips pressed into a thin line, and without a word, he helped you sit up.
“Let’s take care of it,” he said. “Come on.”
The apartment was small, barely enough for the two of you before the twins arrived. Now, it felt even smaller, cluttered with diapers, bottles, and tiny clothes drying on a rack in the corner.
But somehow, Sunghoon still made it feel like home.
He guided you to the bathroom, his hands careful and steady as he helped you undress.
You hesitated when your shirt lifted, revealing the healing incision across your lower abdomen. The skin was still angry and red, the stitches tight. It wasn’t pretty.
Sunghoon didn’t even blink. He just crouched down, his fingertips ghosting over the area as if touching too hard might hurt you.
“You’re so beautiful,” he murmured.
You scoffed, rolling your eyes. “Don’t lie.”
“I’m not,” he said, his voice firm. He kissed just above the scar, lingering for a moment before looking up at you. “This is proof of how strong you are, I love it, I love you.”
You felt something in your chest tighten, an unexpected warmth spreading through you.
“Stop making me emotional,” you muttered, blinking back tears.
He grinned, standing up again. “Can’t help it. Now come on, let’s get you cleaned up.”
Sunghoon washed your hair, fingers massaging your scalp with a tenderness that nearly made you melt. He was careful around your scar, using light touches to clean the area before wrapping you in a warm towel.
You felt better when you stepped out. Not great, not healed, but better.
He sat you down on the closed toilet seat, kneeling in front of you to apply the ointment the doctor had given you. His hands were warm, his touch featherlight.
“Still hurts?” he asked softly.
“A little,” you admitted. “But it’s better when you do it.”
His lips quirked up. “Guess I’ve got the magic touch.”
Once he finished, he helped you into a fresh set of pajamas, sighing when he noticed the stains on your old shirt.
“Your boobs are leaking again.”
You groaned, rubbing at your eyes. “I know… I feel like a damn cow.”
Sunghoon chuckled, helping you put on a fresh nursing bra before tugging a clean shirt over your head. “You’re not a cow, you’re an amazing mom.”
You gave him a look. “An amazing cow mom.”
He pinched your side gently, making you squeak. “Shut up and get in bed.”
You let him guide you back to the bedroom, sighing as you sank into the sheets. He pulled the blankets up to your chin, tucking you in like you were the fragile one, not the twins sleeping soundly in their shared bassinet.
Sunghoon sat beside you for a moment, brushing your hair back from your face.
“You should get some sleep,” he murmured.
You blinked at him,realizing why he hadn’t changed into his pyjamas snd wasn’t under the covers with you “You need to get ready for work.”
“I’ll leave in a bit,” he said, leaning down to kiss your forehead. “Just wanna make sure you’re okay first.”
You reached up, curling your fingers around his wrist. “I don’t want you to go.”
His expression softened. “I know, baby. But we need the money.”
You sighed, closing your eyes. “I hate this.”
“I do too.” He ran his thumb over your cheek. “But we’ll get through it.”
You wanted to believe him. You really did.
But when exhaustion pulled you under, all you could think about was how hard everything was. How much you missed just being you and him.
How much you missed having him next to you, instead of leaving every night to work while you lay awake, waiting for the next time the twins would cry.
Sunghoon stayed until your breathing evened out, pressing one last kiss to your cheek before slipping away to get ready for work.
Even if he hated leaving, he had to. For you. For Yohan and Haneul.
For the life you had built together, not perfect, but beautiful.
#enhypen#enhypen fics#enhypen x reader#enhypen au#enhypen fluff#enhypen crack#enhypen oneshot#park sunghoon#park sunghoon enhypen#park sunghoon au#park sunghoon x reader#park sunghoon fluff#park sunghoon angst#park sunghoon crack#park sunghoon oneshot#sunghoon#sunghoon enhypen#sunghoon park#sunghoon fic#park sunghoon fic#sunghoon fluff#sunghoon crack#sunghoon angst#sunghoon x reader
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I have. Something to talk about and its very very VERY important.
We know that last scene of TDJ where its just PEAK yearning but can we PLEASE appreciate the micro-expressions that passed over both Yohan & Gaon's faces when they faced each other DIRECTLY after a MONTH (if im not wrong) of that whole blowing up fiasco + Yohan's arrest before that??????? Because my GOD.
So we see Gaon call Yohan by his Full Government Name™ (which wasn't very wise for a declared dead enemy of the state who is ALSO wanted but we'll let it pass for romanticisms' sake) and look at his face. His face is one of a scared man. He's not hesitant but he is afraid of how Yohan views him after what transpired between them.

In turn, Yohan looks back and well.

He is also somewhat apprehensive. They're both testing each other & the waters they're in. Although Yohan doesn't have a revenge vendetta shackling him down anymore, Gaon, on the other hand, has tremendous stuff to unpack. They're carefully, if not gently, evaluating the distance between them.
And then, Yohan gives a clear sign that he holds nothing against Gaon. An open arm, an open invitation. To join him? Maybe. To decide what to do with them? Perhaps. It's vague but it's also clear that Yohan is done manipulating Gaon & that he has left the ball in Gaon's court.

Then come the positive changes. With Yohan's green signal, Gaon is somewhat relieved but also incredibly guilt-ridden. I think these frames speak for themselves.




The wet smile & the eye crinkles. He is so relieved to be in Yohan's good graces but also just looking at Yohan be his ever glowing self after serving his life's purpose.
Yohan. My dearest Yohan. Look at him. He's equally heart-broken to be seeing Gaon like this, to be leaving him behind but that little nod he does???? Like he's made a decision that he needs to stick with for the betterment of Gaon???? That's what truly gets me. It's so clear the distance between them is hurting him but he also knows that it's necessary to give Gaon space & time, to unravel & to explore things on his own. Perhaps another assumption on his part because who truly knows what Gaon wants except Gaon himself?

Then it's a brief look exchanged. As he turns, giving Gaon one last reassuring smile as he turns and leaves behind one of the most important people to him.


And gaon watches. Look at his micro-expressions here. Look at his breathing. His sagging shoulders. His eyes. His wet smile. His balled hands. His tiny nods.
He also thinks this is necessary but you can so clearly see its taking every bit of nerve & fiber in him to stay rooted to his place & not chase after Yohan. He's DELIBERATELY not taking a single step towards Yohan. He thinks he doesn't deserve to chase after him, that hes content to see Yohan: alive, well and so utterly free. That's all that matters.
I would genuinely like to appreciate both jinyoung and jisung for their acting bcs they NAILED the raw emotions needed for this absolutely stunning yet gut wrenching scene. It's so difficult to convey such complex emotions through such little means yet they did it to PERFECTION. They both gave their characters LIFE. And for that i will always be grateful bcs i dont think anyone else could've done Kang Yohan and Kim Gaon the way they did.
#The devil judge#the devil judge meta#kang yohan#tdj#kim gaon#ji sung#kdrama#gahan#lawful husbands#the devil judge#park jinyoung
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Superposition | The Devil Judge WIP
Just a sneak peek into the inevitable outcome of me finding out that I can write a story about a 17 year age gap.
After the fire, Yohan wakes up every morning knowing that Isaac is dead.
Elijah wakes up every morning convinced her father is alive.
It's the crush damage of new grief each day, too big for her tiny body and too heavy for her to carry. It's worse than all of Yohan's years under his father's belt; it's not until he loses Isaac and Heejin, until Elijah cries herself unconscious in his arms, that Yohan realizes that his father had been a clumsy jailer, that for all his cruelty he'd been a blunt instrument compared to all the ways suffering can visit itself upon a person.
It's a miracle Elijah is alive, surviving multiple complex fractures and then delayed treatment. They save the flesh and bone of her legs, piece her back together with literal pins and needles. Her x-rays are difficult to look at; the scarring across her ghost-pale skin is worse. She hurts, in a relentless way that is at first impossible to explain to a child, and then is so ordinary she goes quiet with it, turns it inward. She stops crying. She's too weak and immobile for her once-infamous tantrums. She goes quiet instead. She throws books, toys, anything that Yohan brings into her beautifully appointed private room to try to distract her.
"It will be hard, and it will take time," her doctors say, with an infuriating paternalism, as if their performed empathy could dampen constant burn of searing fire across Yohan's shoulders, cut into the shell of him. "But she's young and she's resilient—she'll surprise you."
For the first six months, Yohan spends his limited waking, functional hours desperately trying to hold back the flood with his bare hands. He wakes and he's in too much pain to function. He sleeps and his doctors adjust his pain management regimen. He wakes and he tries to comfort Elijah. He sleeps and he dreams about the skin grafts he's been informed are needed. He wakes and he calls Lawyer Ko. He sleeps when he knows Isaac's Social Responsibility Fund donation is canceled. He loses hours and entire days in the labyrinth of the hospital, winding between the VIP ward and the children's wing, meeting with Elijah's orthopedic surgeon, her occupational therapists, the revolving cast of nurses that transport her from procedure to scan to bedside. He arranges Isaac and Heejin's funeral, and ends up back as a patient when Elijah's meltdown at the gravesite has him tearing one of his barely healed graft sites trying to contain her flailing arms, to swallow all of her screaming pain into the bottomless well in the base of his spine.
It's eight months and six days after the fire that Yohan hears Elijah laugh again.
***
Later, he'll get a comprehensive readout from the hospital grapevine, but the day he meets Gaon for the first time, all he knows is that he's been summoned by the terrifying peds nurses because Elijah and her new friend have committed some kind of juvenile crime.
Yohan's not ignorant to the fact that Elijah is a nightmare child, but he's still a little confused about how a five year old who is—frankly—abysmal with her new wheelchair is any kind of threat to society. He fetches up at to the pediatric OT clinic fully prepared to act like a complete entitled asshole about this, because while Elijah is a monster, she's his monster and therefore completely innocent of all sin, original or otherwise.
Except halfway down the hallway there, he hears the sharp cackle of Elijah's laughter, a goblin shriek of pure wicked joy. It lands like a punch, like a blessing, it leaves him lightheaded.
When he rushes the door, it's to find Elijah in full glory, giggling so hard she can't speak. Her hair is tied up in a series of tiny ponytails that frame her face like a lion's mane, her face is covered in marker, and she's clutching a filthy orange cat to her chest.
"Kang Yohan-sshi," says one of the nurses, who is trying and failing to look severe, from the way her mouth keeps wobbling and her voice is trembling. "As you can see, we have a situation."
"I—where did she get the cat?" Yohan asks, faint.
Another nurse, who is making no effort to hide her grin, says, "Apparently, they found him behind a trash can in the garden and snuck him into the hospital."
Yohan slants his eyes toward her. "They?"
"I'm really not sure how you missed her very obvious partner in crime," the nurse tells him, actively laughing now, and when Yohan turns to look again—turns to see anything other than the miracle of Elijah's smiling face—he sort of understands her point.
Because sitting next to Elijah is a skinny teenaged boy wearing Elijah's headband, all of his short hair pushed back and sticking out like a massive frill around his thin face, his nose colored black and whiskers drawn across his cheeks. He looks less embarrassed than he probably should be, and more incriminating, he's holding some contraption made out of stolen hospital supplies that looks like one those little fishing toys for cats—a single inflated glove hanging from the end—that the fat orange on Elijah's lap keeps reaching for with outstretched paws.
Standing in the doorway, surrounded by staff and other parents who are barely containing their hysterics, the whole thing is even more batshit. Nurse Woo Yeji, the iron fist of the pediatrics ward, is looming over Elijah and the kid on the ground, hands on her hips as she booms out:
"Kang Elijah-sshi, give me that creature immediately."
Elijah narrows her bright little eyes. "Oh no," Yohan mutters.
"My cat," she declares, her chin stuck out in defiance.
"He was so sick and skinny, we had to rescue him," the boy chimes in, with the admirable application of a pair of doleful, sweet eyes. It might be more effective if his face wasn't covered in washable marker and he didn't have a purple heart drawn over his left eyebrow.
"That cat is at least 4 kilograms overweight," Nurse Yeji tells them both, unmoved. "And let me say: Kim Gaon, I thought you had better judgment than this."
The boy, Gaon, takes the comment with the ease of long familiarity with disappointment, but Yohan still sees his eyes go briefly flinty, briefly cold, before he pastes on a smile and says, "I rode my motorcycle into a wall. If you thought I had good judgement, that's your own fault."
"Yah! Kim Gaon!" the nurse yells, which just sets Elijah off again into pealing laughter.
And from the back of the room, Yohan watches the way this mouthy kid, this little punk, glances over to his niece, watches how the fake grin on his face dissolves for something softer—something run through with tenderness too old for his years.
***
Kim Gaon is 17, orphaned, and a frequent flight risk from the group home he's been remanded to with both his parents dead. In the 13 months since his father had died by suicide, and the 10 months since his mother had followed, he's been picked up by the local cops at least a half-dozen times: for smoking, for drinking, for fighting. Yohan looks up photos of Gaon's once-happy family, reads SNS posts mourning the closure of their family restaurant, the police reports about the suicides, the note in Gaon's hospital file that notes that he's going into arrears for his parents' funeral costs. Kim Gaon's social worker talks about him with a sort of resigned apology, approaches Yohan's interest like another black mark in the boy's service jacket. She looks at Yohan's suit and briefcase, takes his business card and calls him Lawyer Kang, spills the whole of Gaon's history, reassures Yohan that however self-destructive, however volatile, Kim Gaon's never displayed any violent tendencies toward children, that Lawyer Kang should feel free to reach out immediately if he feels concern that Gaon has become Elijah's friend.
"If you'd like me to speak to him, to tell him you're not comfortable with him spending time with you niece, I completely understand," his social worker says.
Kim Gaon has been treated for two different STIs and tried to kill himself with a motorcycle three months ago. The only people he has left in the world are a childhood friend from down the street and Judge Min Jeongho, who used to eat lunch at the Kim's restaurant every day.
Kim Gaon is 17 and entirely alone.
Yohan smiles at her. "No need," he reassures her. "I'll handle this on my own."
***
Too much of Kim Gaon's character reference is ultimately hearsay. Yohan doesn't trust himself, exactly, but he trusts his judgement, so he watches quietly from the sidelines, collecting data. Yohan hears all the nurses talk about how Gaon is achingly polite, how they can't understand how such a nice boy could be such an evident wild child he would ride motorcycles with reckless lack of self preservation. He watches Gaon do other peoples' homework, quizzing them on Joseon history and showing a middle schooler who's learning how to write with his left hand trigonometry. Kim Gaon plays Smash Brothers with a flock of elementary school kids and ruthlessly kicks their asses every single time.
The Kim Gaon that's considered a neighborhood menace, the one sends his teachers into a blind fury, that's the protective armor. Yohan knows from defensive adaptations.
But being a nice kid isn't the same as belonging in Elijah's life in any meaningful way, Yohan acknowledges, and spends a pointless day drafting soul-killing discovery motions and wondering why he's devoting so much time to this distraction. Maybe it's how Elijah's sleeping through the nights better, communicating her pain and what she needs better. Maybe it's how she tells stories about her friend Gaon, and it briefly feels as if they've traveled backward through time, that Yohan's watching her for the night, hearing and becoming deeply invested in all of her day care drama.
"Elijah-ah, why do you like Gaon so much?" Yohan asks her one night, midway through the intricate ritual of her bedtime routine.
From her bed, Elijah says, "Gaon is funny and cats like him and also his parents are dead, so someone has to take care of him," and without missing a beat, points her sparkling princess wand toward the closet, commanding, "Check there, too."
Yohan climbs off of the floor where he'd been checking under the bed and goes.
"Would you want to see Gaon even outside of the hospital?" he asks her, doing a careful four-point inspection of the closet: more clothes than one child could ever wear, 200 pairs of shoes, a stuffed sheep the size of a horse—no monsters. "Closet's clear."
Elijah makes a considering noise. "Gaon-oppa said he was a really good cook, so I want to eat his food," she decides, and shy now, she waves Yohan toward her, tiny hands flapping. "Samchon, come here. I want to tell you a secret."
Yohan cherishes every secret he has with Elijah. Since she was born, he's kept so many for her: that she stole a cookie, that she's really really not scared of thunder, that she loves her uncle best, that church is boring.
"I'm ready," Yohan promises, and sits at the edge of her bed with his most serious expression.
Elijah looks left and right, as if there are spies around every corner, before she cups her hands around her mouth and Yohan curls over her so that she can whisper:
"Sometimes I forget I'm sad about Mom and Dad, but Gaon-oppa says that's okay because I never forget that I love them."
It lands somewhere in Yohan's soft underbelly, in the forever ache of his scare tissue. He looks down into Elijah's solemn little face, her riverstone eyes, and he wonders what kind of benevolent God allows this—forces children to patch one another's broken hearts. He used to wish that he would have died instead, that he could trade himself for Isaac, for Heejin, but he's comforted Elijah through too many nightmares of his own death to entertain it any longer. Love's always been a chain, whether wrapped around his wrist with a cross or trapping him in his father's house.
"You will, you always will," he whispers back.
"And they love me, too, of course, in heaven," she tells him, with the haughty confidence of a spoilt only child, who'd grown up with three adults circling around her in constant adulation.
"And I love you here, on Earth," he says, and does not add, your grandfather loves you, too, from where he's burning in hell.
Elijah goes suddenly quiet, thoughtful and a little distant, and Yohan waits patiently until she says at last, "Gaon doesn't think his parents love him in heaven."
Yohan stills. "Did he say that?"
"He told his friend, the unni that visits sometimes," Elijah reports, and staring dead into Yohan's eyes, she adds, "I was hiding behind a curtain listening. He also said he can't be her boyfriend."
"Okay, well, time for little goblins to go to sleep," Yohan says, because he absolutely cannot start laughing about this because somewhere out there, in the beautiful hereafter that Isaac so fervently believed in, he would be furious if Yohan encouraged this kind of behavior.
***
For all Yohan's been investigating the mystery of Kim Gaon, he's wholly unprepared to be confronted by the reality of the boy while sitting in the hospital cafe at half past five, working his way through a stack of files for court the next day.
"Kang Yohan-sshi?" comes a voice, and when Yohan looks up, it's into the shaggy bangs and thin face of the boy who makes Elijah laugh, standing awkwardly at the edge of his table.
"Ah," he says, flipping his pen across his knuckles. "You're Kim Gaon."
Gaon's eyes round. "You recognize me?"
"The nurses tell me you're friends with Elijah," Yohan says, and waves at one of the empty chairs at the table, shuffles a few folders around to make room. "Please."
It takes more than a little maneuvering for Gaon to take the offered seat, between his backpack and his crutches, his leg still in its cast, and Yohan offers him a steadying arm, takes his bag, helps shift the table this way and that way. Gaon looks mortified the whole time by these small courtesies, stumbling over thank yous and apologies. It tells on him in ways Gaon can't possibly know, but that Yohan can't possibly ignore.
"What brings you to my temporary office?" Yohan asks, when he's sure the kid isn't going to tip over and break anything else, and is only in immediate danger of blushing to death.
Gaon squares his shoulders, and taking a deep breath, says, "I wanted to talk to you about a cat."
This is how Yohan learns that the orange furball that he's first seen that day in the OT room all those many weeks ago is a stray that's been named Gam, and that Elijah's youthful enthusiasm for petty hospital-based crime has undergone a metamorphosis toward more elaborate heists.
"Not that I don't admire her ambition, but I'm pretty sure you'd notice the yowling lump in her sweater when you pick her up from OT," Gaon says, still nervous and too polite, darting wary little glances upward at Yohan. "I tried to talk her out of it, but she started arguing about how cold it was going to get and I had to admit defeat."
Yohan feels the corners of his mouth curl up, reflexive. "There's wisdom in recognizing when you're beaten," he says. "And I appreciate your letting me know."
"Sure," Gaon says before going quiet for a long measure, some unfinished sentence still hidden behind his lashes. Yohan's patient, waits him out, and is rewarded when a half-minute passes and Gaon says, with a brittle courage and poorly concealed vulnerability, "I—I'd take him with me if I could. I like Gam. But the house where I have to stay won't allow pets."
Yohan can hear a universe in between the confession here: that Gaon must have been worried about the cold weather long before Elijah even noticed, that he'd tried to find an answer all on his own. Yohan feels, tugging in the hollow underneath his breastbone, a hurtful recognition of a younger version of himself, all those raw edges fraying, and maybe—sitting here—he can understand a little of Isaac's quiet sadness, the way Yohan had carried all his suffering alone, as a matter of course, without ever trying to ask for help.
He looks at the slope of Gaon's shoulders, the wrinkled collar of his school uniform shirt, his terrible haircut, the little divot of a piercing in his ear. Yohan thinks about the sunburst of Elijah's laughter and all the terrible things he's willing to do to sustain it; it's strange to realize he hadn't anticipated something so easy, something that wouldn't hurt at all.
"Do me a favor," Yohan sighs.
Gaon's head darts up. "Um—if I can?" he says.
"Back me up when I tell her that I thought long and hard about this, and that I'm going to be a strict taskmaster about this cat," Yohan says, with a rueful certainty that there's no way in hell that Elijah is going to buy this narrative, because it looks like the sun is rising in the brightness of Gaon's eyes, the pink happiness of his too-thin cheeks. This kid couldn't lie effectively if his life depended on it. In this light, Gaon looks a little like Isaac, if Isaac was too thin and too hopeful, all gamine pleasure; it makes Yohan feel his bones creak just to look at him.
"I will, I absolutely will," Gaon promises, smiling now and still shy, but so achingly sweet that it makes Yohan want to buy him hot chocolate, to tell him he's done a good job, to ask if he's eaten dinner.
He forebears, and starts packing up his work documents instead.
"Come on," he tells Gaon. "If I'm going to make a fool of myself trying to trap a feral hospital cat, you're coming with me."
Yohan ends up scratched to hell and back, his hand-tailored wool trousers covered in mud, while Gaon laughs at him with a wide-open happiness that makes something in Yohan's chest feel too big for his rib cage. He decides not to think about it in favor of fetching Elijah from her PT and ferrying her down to his car, where Gaon is waiting for them both, a sulking Gam zipped into the front of his hoodie like an uncooperative child. His smile could light every building in Gangnam. Elijah's shriek of pure joy when she spots him leaves Yohan half-deaf for the drive home, and so the warm patter of Elijah and Gaon talking in the backseat rolls over him in indistinct syllable noises until he drops Gaon off at his group home and helps him to the door.
"Thank you, for today," Gaon tells him, starry and still rosy, covered in cat hair.
"Elijah's already drawing up plans for shared custody, so don't be a stranger," Yohan warns.
He'd been ordered by Elijah to participate in an exchange of contact information with Gaon because everybody in the car had a unique and unaddressed relationship with the trauma of abandonment, and so of course Gam could not be suddenly bereft of one of his humans.
"I won't, I promise," Gaon swears, and nods back toward the car, where Elijah is holding Gam up against the window and waving his paw at them. "You should get her home."
Elijah talks nonstop during the drive out of the urban density of Seoul into the forested beyond where their family home is perched on a melodramatic cliff above a lake. Yohan hears about her nurses, her rivalry with another little boy in OT who sounds like he has a world-ending crush on her Gaon-oppa, and listens to the way Elijah sometimes stops mid-sentence when Gam meows at her and then replies, as if she can understand cat.
Whatever is bubbling in his veins, its too violent to be the warm kindness of joy. This ferocity feels like some holy gratitude, feels like the way Isaac used to talk about God. Yohan has never any good at faith, but he thinks—to himself, so loudly he hears it over the roar of blood in his ears and the chattering happiness of Elijah, vividly alive—he thinks, thank you, thank you, to whoever is listening: to God, to fate, to fortune, to the fucking cat—to Gaon, waving at Elijah with both hands, a smile on his face and Gam curled close against his chest.
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"Can you show me how?" from the prompt list, please and thank you! Kink of choice is up to you. :)
'can you show me how?' gaon asks from the doorway.
'come here,' yohan replies. he sits on the low counter, back to the mirror. 'all the way here. you need to be close.'
so gaon steps between the older man's parted legs. it's cool and warmly lit in the older man's personal bathroom.
'this is how you hold the blade,' yohan says, wrapping gaon's fingers around the straight shaving blade. 'rest your three fingers along the back. put your pinkie on the tail, and middle finger along -- yes, exactly. this grip gives you nice control.' he smiles mischievously. 'let the weight do the work.'
gaon rests his lower body against the older man's, feeling warmth and sturdy support. 'i'm going to put the blade against your neck now.'
he holds the back of yohan's head one handedly, and with the other rests the blade against yohan's skin. he maintains more control than necessary. nevertheless, he's thrilled when it slides through shaving cream and stubble, leaving silky skin behind.
his eyes drop to yohan's. they're standing close enough for him to take in their wide and lovely effect.
'that was good,' says the older man without blinking.
gaon smiles, wipes the blade clean and puts it against yohan's throat this time. yohan lets him.
the blade meets resistance here in the bump of yohan's Adam's apple. gaon presses closer, feeling rather than seeing yohan's hands fall to his hips.
is this alright? he wants to say but doesn't. he focuses on the blade and not getting distracted by the heat of yohan's stare, his coy mouth, his body.
'all done,' he says, setting the blade down. his hand trembles and it clinks against the marble counter.
'not quite. you haven't done antiseptic spray or oil,' the older man tells him.
gaon looks at him flatly. 'i just asked to see how to shave.'
'this is shaving. go on. i trust you.' yohan makes his eyes very big again. as if trust has anything to do with this.
so gaon wipes him clean with a damp towel. then he picks up the spray, spritzes yohan's face and neck then slaps it in place for good measure.
'now the oil,' says the older man cheerfully.
gaon breathes out through his nose and reaches for the bottle, coating his palms lightly but carefully this time. he doesn't want to get oil on yohan's collar, not when they're both dressed for a live trial later in the day.
the first touch of his hands over yohan's skin feels devestatingly intimate. he rubs the oil in, sharply aware of yohan watching him shamelessly, of the older man letting gaon get a palm around his throat.
'all done for real,' he says finally. but instead of releasing yohan, he cups the older man's face instead.
'yeah,' replies the older man. and then, 'what do you think? could you trust me too?'
they're standing so close together that he's breathing yohan's air, sweet puffs across his face. yohan can see every tiny thought flit across his face. gaon rests his forehead against yohan's and looks back unafraid.
maybe, he thinks, before slipping his eyes shut and kissing him.
--
i had a good time writing this ficlet, so thanks for playing dawn 😘🥳
prompt from this list!
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Fanfic word game!
Thanks to @clawbehavior for tagging me :)
Rules: you will be given a word. Then you share one sentence/excerpt from your wip(s) that starts with each letter of your word!
My word is ALIKE
A: And since Gaon had become a monster too, not due to something Yohan had done but through his own folly, that’s what he deserves as well. Not as a penance, no. Suffering doesn’t make people better, it doesn’t bring relief; Gaon knows this. But he doesn’t want to be better, doesn't want absolution. It’s too late for that. So pain for pain’s sake will suffice.
From Feel Me, Heal Me (The Devil Judge). It's been a work in progress for ages, but maybe the pieces will come together, eventually :)
L: “Like, there can only be one Book of Life?” Muriel says unsurely.
“Why? No one said there can��t be a second edition, complete and unabridged. Or a pirate copy. That’s how it is with books. Even authors aren’t always in control of what becomes of them.”
From Side Effects, Done by the Book (Good Omens).
I: “I’m a lunatic, everyone says so. I do whatever I like, even if other people think it’s weird. Why would I care? If I’m not harming anyone, why is it their business how I choose to live?”
Joo Won surprises him by saying, “You’re the most normal person I’ve ever met. That’s what normal should be. Not what others think.” But being Han Joo Won, of course he adds, “Maybe that’s your problem.”
From Someone to Miss You When You’re Gone (Beyond Evil). I very much hope to finish it :)
K: Knowing this hurts more than everything he's been through. All he wants to do is to rewind his memory back to when he was still foolishly oblivious.
From Double Break (Doctor Who)
E: Everything feels somehow muted, but he can make his way home on autopilot, without much thinking.
He usually takes a shortcut to his house past a row of lock-up garages. Today there's a black van parked beside them, almost blocking the way. For a moment, a tiny flicker of unease flares up beneath the film of apathy, urging him to turn back, right now, but he just keeps walking. This has nothing to do with him. Hardly anything has to do with him nowadays.
From Until You Get to the Sea (Slow Horses), a sequel to Show Me It Hurts.
Tagging @altschmerzes, @cartwrong, @tenderhooked and @abuddingcandle. Play if you want to! Your word is SLOW ;)
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based on one of my fav harringrove fics, a baby shows up on yohan's doorstep with big brown eyes and wispy hair. concerned, he takes the child in and does his own digging for the parents. but with no luck, the baby stays under yohan's care. elijah thinks he's so adorable, and gaon isn't not himself, per se, but yohan does notice a quieter difference in him.
yohan takes to the baby so easily. after all, he helped raised elijah. giving them a bottle and changing diapers is second nature at this point. but it sticks in his head that gaon's hesitantly, so very unlike him. he interacts with the child, cautiously. and maybe it's a product of gaon never having grown up around children - an only child, after all.
but yohan also knows there's something else. something gaon isn't telling him. he doesn't prod like he normally would. instead, gives gaon the space he needs to adapt. yohan's not quite sure if the baby should stay under his care. it's quite the predicament, and even further suspicious when he starts noticing the baby's characteristics and personality, very much like baby elijah, even more so like isaac. but definitely that of gaon and himself.
the baby has an identical mole on his neck as yohan. the color of his eyes are the same rich, dark brown shade that regards yohan with curiosity, caution and love. yohan has his suspicions, as absurd as they are. until gaon confesses in the midst of a baby's wail, unable to calm him down and overwhelmed with the prospect of this new life.
on an accidental whim, gaon might've wished for a family. unbeknownst to him that yohan promised himself he'd keep gaon forever. and instead of the universe granting the normalcy that is their family, it extended it by one - a blend of yohan and gaon in a tiny human who showed up on yohan's doorstep just as perfect as the day gaon did, too.
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Hi <3 I just wanted to reach out and wish you all the strength and comfort in the world as you navigate this difficult time. Your writing brings so much joy to readers like me, and I hope you’re surrounded by support and love.
If you don’t mind, could you share a bit more about Yohan's thoughts in "Thou Shalt Not Covet"? I’m intrigued by your take on him as someone with darker thoughts and sides, and I’d love to understand your perspective. (you previously mentioned that he had not-so-nice thoughts, which intrigues me greatly! and i wanted to ask if u could talk a little more about them)
Thank you for all the effort you put into your stories, they’re truly inspiring!
Thank you so much 💜 Admittedly, things are still pretty rough. I keep feeling stressed and disoriented and that just adds to the overall exhaustion I'm already struggling with. But I'll get through it eventually. I always do :)
As for Yo Han and his thoughts during Thou Shalt Not Covet?
WELL.
He's a right bastard, that's what he is x'D I mean, aside from the more obvious things he does to Ga On? Like taking his phone away — which is Ga On's only way of getting a taxi AND calling someone for help should the situation escalate — more or less blocking the door to keep Ga On from leaving, and interrupting whenever Ga On tries to speak?
As if that's not enough, Yo Han also does a lot of subtle manipulations to make sure that he maintains the upper hand and that Ga On is easier to nudge in the direction Yo Han wants him. Because while Yo Han starts out confused, unsure of what's going on, he soon realises that a) Ga On is now aware of the attraction between them, b) Ga On is very insecure about said attraction, c) Ga On is unhappy with Yo Han's commitment to their attraction, and d) Ga On is outright jealous.
And that's something Yo Han can work with.
Because this is Yo Han from around episode 10 of the drama and he's not a kind or considerate man at that point in time. So while he does give both himself and Ga On what they want in the end, make no mistake — the way he goes about it is problematic.
Aside from the aforementioned physical ways Yo Han is directing the situation, he also bluntly says: "Yes, I did have sex with him." And that right there? That's him trying to throw Ga On off balance. He wants to keep Ga On in a heightened emotional state so that he's easier to manipulate. And sure, while they both want the thing Yo Han is aiming for with his manipulations, that's still a red flag. Because Yo Han doesn't have to take that route. He could be much more understanding and gentle.
But he chooses not to be.
And the main reason for that is that Yo Han still has limits to how far he's willing to go — and how much of his own pride he's willing to forsake in order to keep Ga On with him. He chose to follow Ga On back to his room, sure — which I agree is pretty monumental — but he's not giving an inch until he's sure he's actually going to be gaining something from it. He keeps asking Ga On questions, figuring the situation out, then basically launches an attack to discombobulate and convince Ga On to give a relationship a try. During the majority of that conversation, Yo Han is intentionally making Ga On more desperate because he knows that'll make Ga On more likely to succumb.
And the fact that Yo Han wants Ga On to succumb isn't just because he cares about him and wants to smooch him — far from it. Because this is Yo Han and, naturally, he's already thought through every scenario and reached the conclusion that, hey, being in a relationship with Ga On will probably be beneficial for his revenge plot because it'll tie Ga On to him more firmly. It'll make Ga On less likely to leave and Ga On is very useful to Yo Han.
(not to mention that Yo Han wants to own every tiny fraction of Ga On's body, heart, and soul)
Starting a relationship with Ga On is a good strategic move, in other words.
It's a tactical decision more so than it's an emotional one.
And, in a similar vein, Yo Han would have chosen not to pursue Ga On if he'd reached the conclusion that it would risk his plans. Because, at this point in the drama, in Yo Han's mind, Ga On — and Yo Han's own desires — are below his revenge on his list of priorities. If their relationship jeopardised his plans, he'd end it. Without hesitation.
So while it may seem pretty romantic that Yo Han follows Ga On to his room and asks him those questions that prove just how many exceptions Yo Han has made for him, you gotta remember that nothing Yo Han does is accidental. He knows just what to say to make Ga On more dependent on him and, when you look at everything he said? Yo Han never once mentioned his own emotions. It was all Ga On reading between the lines and giving Yo Han the benefit of the doubt. He even dodges Ga On's attempt to trap him with the "What do you want it to be?" question by turning it on Ga On, asking if he hasn't figured it out yet.
Not once does Yo Han give an actual verbal answer — he just asks questions and allows Ga On to fill in the blanks.
Because Yo Han knows that he's made Ga On desperate enough that Ga On will fill those empty spaces with what appeals to him the most. By not offering any words himself, Ga On will add the ones he wants to hear instead — and they'll be sweeter, more emotional, more romantic — without Yo Han having to do a thing or surrendering any more of his pride by actually admitting to caring about Ga On.
Ga On does it all by himself.
That doesn't make the emotions any less true — Yo Han does care about Ga On a great deal — but he's not willing to say it at this point in their relationship. He's not willing to leave himself vulnerable or at Ga On's mercy. Because, deep down, Yo Han isn't ready for that kind of commitment, nor does he feel that level of trust towards Ga On.
So, instead, Yo Han makes sure to remain in charge during that whole conversation and uses every trick in the book to manipulate Ga On to his liking.
And sure, that may sound harsh, but that's who Yo Han is. If you look at the drama, that's how he behaves. He is this much of an asshole. He would use Ga On's emotions against him and exploit every weakness he can spot, just to get what he wants.
He's just lucky that, this time, Ga On wants the same thing.
That's not to say that Yo Han comes out of this unscathed, by the way. He thinks he has, being all aloof and untouchable, not realising that he's put himself in quite the pickle once they actually start growing even closer, both physically and emotionally. Which they'll do much quicker than in canon.
Because suddenly Yo Han will be getting fond little kisses whenever Ga On is near. And soft, warm smiles whenever Yo Han does something that makes Ga On happy. And he'll find out what sounds Ga On makes when he's so overwhelmed by pleasure that he can't even form words anymore. And he'll be struck dumb by how angelic Ga On looks in the mornings, sleeping peacefully next to Yo Han.
In short: Yo Han is doomed.
He'd soften a lot quicker than in the drama and his priorities might start shifting without him noticing. Because we all know he's helpless against Ga On's doe eyes and, sooner or later, he'll become that sappy, lovesick old man we all know and love.
So sure, Yo Han is abusive and toxic during this fic — which I don't think should be forgotten or excused — but he's also given Ga On the opening to manipulate him back. And while Ga On won't do it knowingly, Yo Han still won't stand a chance.
And I don't know about you, but I love that for him.
Yo Han won't know what hit him until it's already too late and then his only option is to accept his fate and love and cherish Ga On for the rest of their lives.
A+ scheming there, Mr. Abyss.
That didn't backfire on you at all.
#Amethystina Replies#Anonymous#Thou Shalt Not Covet#I admit that sometimes I really don't want to get into Yo Han's head#Because it's not a pretty place#And his viciousness goes against my own instincts a lot of the time#But I try to respect his thoughts as much as I can#Because that's how I can keep him as in character as possible#But I would be lying if I said it's not terribly exhausting sometimes#Because he's so goddamn mean x'D#Anyhow#The friends who were visiting have gone home now#So I'm going to try and reply to all the asks I've gotten#And maybe comments#But I also need to edit stuff#But I also want to write#And draw#And read#I'm definitely going to exhaust myself in other words#Because I'm feeling stressed and behind schedule#And there's the funeral next week too#Goddammit
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Unboxing Yohan x Gaon Part Two
Continuing from Part One which can be found here.
Here we have the Gaon keychain which has the same finishing as the Yohan keychain. The front is shiny because of the acrylic, and it has glitter too which came out looking white because of my camera.

It comes with a tiny bell and star-shaped keychain clasp. And here's the back - matte just like the Yohan one.

Next, let's admire the two keychains together.
Left is the front and Right is the back.


And onward to the one I treasured the most. The standee! Only one that I have seen anyone selling so far. My previous buy from @thedeviljudge was a keychain too.
Here's the front.

Love how they seem to light up due to the subtle light coming through the standee.
And here's the back with that same effect.

I love them so so much and I can't thank @blueatelier enough for willing to share her artwork in such a manner. Can't wait to display them once my new cabinet is up.
#the devil judge#kang yohan x kim gaon#gahan#lawful husbands#yohan x gaon#wish there were more of such products I can buy.#and they are so rare that's why I cherish every artwork#every drawing that has been posted#I download and keep them#a self-proclaimed guardian of such lovelies which need to be kept for posterity.
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yohan: ano ang tawag sa maliit na pusit?
yohan: [in tiny] psst
* police sirens *
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on the recommendation of a nameless anon i have now finished watching the kdrama "the auditors"
found it surprisingly engaging. they really should've given it a more exciting title to draw viewers in... sadly "infernal affairs" has already been used a few times. that would've been a good one.
my concern about being lulled to sleep by finance talk was mostly unfounded bc if this show is to be believed, performing internal corporate financial investigations is actually one of the most action packed jobs a person can have, replete with dangerous car chases, breaking and entering to acquire secret files, hand to hand combat, murder attempts, and more besides.
i assume anon rec'd this to me primarily for the mentor/mentee relationship between the leads which i did enjoy. tbh shin chail is a little too... Like That for me to imagine him ever engaging in a romantic relationship with anyone, but the tiny moments where he starts to act concerned about hansoo's wellbeing were very sweet despite. and there's just something so fun about watching a character repeatedly shoot their shot with someone who just stares back at them like 😐
on that note i love fictional guys who seem like normies at a glance but then reveal Freak Behavior so i was a big fan of hansoo. cute happy guy who is ready to do literally anything his boss asks of him no matter how insane as long as he thinks it's for a good cause... fascinating. should be studied in a lab. (affectionate)
i honestly ended up more entranced by daewoong though, he is just so sexy and beautiful and complicated. like the kang yohan of the megacorp construction business. although for him to achieve true hotness we desperately need to get my man out of being a CEO and into a career that provides something positive for society. like maybe being an organized crime boss that steals from the rich and gives to the poor or something. his skillset would transfer over well i feel.
if i had any complaints about this show... one would be that the female lead is. not great imo. she's just so flat and wooden in almost every scene and it really tanks the emotionality of an otherwise interesting plotline. and also the subs i was watching were pretty glaringly bad. i know it's on viki so i assume they might've been taken from there? they certainly track with viki's usual quality. mr netflix please acquire this it deserves better 😭
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Zero context WIP game ! Thank you @clawbehavior for the tag, excited to do this because I've got like 10 different wips and kept resisting the temptation to post snippets. These fics don't have definitive titles yet so the ones here are approximative descriptions
1. Ms Ji & the Kangs
“Yohan-ah, I love you, don’t cry” Isaac says, patting his baby brother’s stomach when he fusses. They’re both laying on Isaac’s bed after lunch, a bit drowsy in the early hours of the afternoon. Young-Ok watches the two as she folds laundry.
“Nanny, why does Yohan have no eyebrows ?” Isaac asks curiously.
She chuckles at the question, taking a tiny pair of socks out of the basket and folding them together. “Most babies are born without much hair, he’ll grow them later on.”
2. Conversations
Gaon swipes ‘accept call’ and props his phone against a utensil holder as Elijah’s lovely face comes into view. She has cut her hair into a bob, even bangs forming a curtain on her forehead.
“Gaon, it's an emergency ! You need to come to Geneva and do something !” Elijah’s voice immediately comes through the phone speaker, loud enough to be heard over the sound of meat sizzling on the stove. “Yohan is serious about growing that ugly mustache and the clinic receptionist keep trying to hit on him !”
3. Yohan through Isaac's photography
October 1991, Yohan showing me his teeth
Gaon chuckles at the photo. It’s blurry like the objective had gone out of focus at the last minute. Yohan is giving the camera a smile and scrunching his nose, eyes closed under his fringe like he’s shielding them from the flash. Some milk teeth are missing from his gums, two permanent ones just peeking above the surface. He must have been no more than six or seven here.
4. Gaon scrolls online forums
"Judge Oh, I have this file I wanted discuss with you"
Jinjoo comes up behind him to see just as he is about to unlock his computer. What greets Gaon after entering his password is the previous night's research topic brightly displayed on the screen. Shit. Carelessly, he had simply shut the laptop before going to bed, instead of closing the tabs and erasing his search history.
Panic and embarrassment seize Gaon on the spot. He's about two hundred-percent certain that Jinjoo got a glimpse of what was written on the screen. Omegaverse fanfiction of him and their boss. Gaon wants to explode.
"You have…a lot of open tabs, Judge Kim."
5. Another snippet from Conversations
“You have something under your eye”
“Hmm ?” Yohan hums, closing said eye when Gaon’s thumb gently swipes across his skin.
“Eyelash.” Gaon flicks it away “crap I should’ve told you to make a wish”
They’re laying on the couch in a tangle of limbs, Gaon on top of Yohan like a weighted blanket, chest to chest, book long abandoned on the coffee table. Kkomi is on the armrest behind Yohan’s head, sniffing at his hair. Gaon yawns into Yohan’s collar.
“We should go to bed.” Yohan says, voice hoarse.
6. Sunah lives
It is routine until her ears catch familiar voices, ones she thought she would never hear again, along with the cries of a fussy child.
“Gaon-ah, give her to me”
Sunah turns around to see, to her surprise, peering over the café’s balcony, Kang Yohan, his niece, his former associate, passing over an agitated toddler.
“I told you we should have brought her stroller,” Kim Gaon’s reprimands are a refreshing thing to hear “She gets tired.”
“It would have been inconvenient though, with all the stairs and narrow streets.” Kang Elijah chimes in. She is on crutches now, standing just a few centimeters shy of her uncle’s height.
“That’s fine” Kang Yohan hauls up the little girl against his chest so that her head rests on his shoulder, pats her back. “Appa will be the stroller today."
Tagging @thedeviljudges if you feel like doing it !
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WIP Wednesday
My WIPs are in a shambles: the two that were closest to being finished on Monday are now both undergoing extensive rewrites due to structural issues. Plus I'm too chickenshit to post draft-grade smut, so here's a chunk of "Something Stronger" (postcanon smut) that I'm 99% sure is staying.
Actually taking the Ambien was anticlimactic. The instructions were to take one. On an empty stomach. At the time you wished to sleep. Somehow he’d been expecting more of the kind of convoluted instructions he’d been navigating with his so-called sleep hygiene routine. He was sitting in the car of a ferris wheel. The ferris wheel was in the little yard beside the Kang mansion. (Even in the dream Gaon realized how silly that was. There wasn’t room on that tiny lawn for a giant ferris wheel.) When Gaon’s car reached the top of the wheel he noticed a small boat down in the lake that the mansion overlooked. Yohan and Elijah sat in the boat. (Again, this was impossible. The cliff was over 100 feet tall and the ferris wheel was as tall as the house. He should not have been able to make out the faces of the people in the boat.) But he couldn’t help feeling panicked. Yohan was pulling steadily on the oars, propelling the boat away from the mansion, away from Gaon. He knew they wouldn’t be able to hear him, rationally he knew, but he couldn’t stop screaming their names. After an agonizingly slow rotation his car reached the ground again. Gaon pushed on the bar over his lap. He pulled. He frantically twisted and felt for a switch. He screamed for help. He tried to squeeze out from under it. But there was no mechanism to free him from the car. And there was no one on the hilltop to help him. By the time the car rose high enough again that he could see the lake over the trees on the edge of the cliff the boat was a speck in the distance, at the mouth of the river that emptied out of the lake.
He woke late in the morning. He didn’t immediately recall the dream. He spent a few moments just appreciating that he had slept. He had slept the whole night through for the first time in months. He felt … OK. It hadn’t been magically restorative sleep. And one night of uninterrupted rest wasn't going to be enough to undo months of sleep deprivation. But then he did remember the dream and his annoyance at its transparent metaphor overtook his almost serene moment. It was true, though, what he’d heard about the vividness of Ambien dreams. He had felt the heat of the sun, the sharp edges of the peeling paint on the ferris wheel. He had smelled iron and grass and the breeze off the lake. He had heard the turtledoves that frequented the trees around the mansion. But an annoying dream was more than worth the full night of sleep.
#and the next night he thinks he's having another really vivid dream#but it's a sex dream#and of course it isn't really a dream#MUAHAHAHAHAHAAAA#i do so love dubious consent#WIP wednesday#the devil judge
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Whelp, just finished episode 12 of the Devil Judge and the Paintrain has begun to leave the station.
I had the best intentions of writing today but I think I’m going to finish this series instead. It’s still early ish in the day, I might be able to accomplish both. Sadly tomorrow I start my regular schedule at work and I’m working but it’s work from home so I get to sleep in and I’m kinda excited about that!
Edit: One tiny little minirant. Has Kang Yohan NOT heard of calling fucking emergency services?! Mans been shot, if K wasn’t dead he sure as fuck is now because Yohan didn’t bother to call 119 or yanno tell Su-Hyeon he was fucking shot when he was on the phone with her.
Nah he’s just gonna bleed out and die next to his ex-boyfriend right hand man instead. 🤦♀️
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