~18 she/her~"It takes courage to give up on ones dreams that you have strived for, I will still be proud of you eternally."
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he’s my world, the one that lights up my life



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im gone ive ascended
nvm retracting my sentence about being bias wrecked. sorry my shayla, it was a moment of weakness. please forgive me 🧎♀️➡️


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I passed out

JUNGWON Getty Images at Coachella 2025 Week 2 | Photo by Frazer Harrison
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“Can’t touch you, but I’m gonna make you mine.”
ENHYPEN’s Mini Album ‘DESIRE : UNLEASH’ will be out on June 5, 2025.
#lee heeseung#enhypen#jay#jay park#park jongseong#jake#jake sim#sim jaeyun#heeseung#sunghoon#park sunghoon#yang jungwon#ni-ki#nishimura riki#kim sunoo#sunoo#jungwon#hee dazed𐂂
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this is my fucking favorite story
SAFE & SOUND — enhypen (m)
Navigating one year post-apocalypse, when the dead began to walk and the living proved to be no better, you decide that trust is a luxury you can no longer afford. But after a run-in with a group of seven peculiar survivors, you learn that there are bigger problems than just the undead roaming the streets. You also start to wonder if there’s more to survival than simply staying alive.
word count: 142k words
genre: dystopian, post-apocalyptic survival, horror/thriller, slow burn, ANGST
status: completed! (15/01/25 – 05/04/25)
warnings: depictions of graphic violence, blood, death, and loss, horror themes, usage of strong language and profanities, descriptions of gore, killing, weaponry use, survivor guilt, trauma bonding, morally gray characters/ideologies, and basically anything and everything that comes with a zombie apocalypse. readers' discretion is advised. please click out if you have a weak heart, I MEAN IT.
disclaimer: this is a work of pure fiction. If any context is similar to any other stories, it's either inspired (in which credit will be given) or just a coincidence. the characters' personalities, words, actions and thoughts do not represent them in real life. any resemblance to any real life events or person, present or past, are purely coincidental. i apologise in advance for any spelling or grammar mistakes.
notes from nat: some plot points and zombies are inspired by the walking dead franchise. also inspired by safe & sound—mother swift's soundtrack for the hunger games. actually lowkey want to kms for writing this.

part 1 - rotten
part 2 - warmth
part 3 - whispers
part 4 - blood
part 5 - people
part 6 - dusk
part 7 - hope
extra cuts - jungwon's pov

Copyright© 2025 thatfeelinwhenyou All Rights Reserved
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I fucking cried my eyes out
SAFE & SOUND — extras: jungwon's POV
Navigating one year post-apocalypse, when the dead began to walk and the living proved to be no better, you decide that trust is a luxury you can no longer afford. But after a run-in with a group of seven peculiar survivors, you learn that there are bigger problems than just the undead roaming the streets. You also start to wonder if there’s more to survival than simply staying alive.
word count: 18.1k (LMFAOOOO)
a/n: erm... i know i said i wouldn't be writing anything extra for safe & sound but I saw some of your comments saying how it would be interesting to read from Jungwon's perspective. i realised then, how much detail I was missing out on because I was writing in first perspective. the thought irked me. so I opened my laptop and wrote this... LOL it's not full chapters, just some scenes and extra cuts that I thought would be fun to read in won's POV! enjoy reliving some of the most traumatic moments I guess? as usual, heavy trigger warning for blood, killing, death, ANGST, and morally grey ideologies.
MASTERLIST
Pre-Safe & Sound
The courtroom reeks of cigarette smoke and musty paper, the air so thick it feels like it’s clogging his lungs. Jungwon’s shoulders ache from sitting too stiff for too long, his back pressed against the cold metal of the chair. His fingers tap against his thigh in an impatient rhythm, a habit he’s never quite managed to shake.
Jungwon is just one of many faces scattered throughout the makeshift courtroom—one of many playing pretend in a crumbling civilisation that wants to believe it’s still standing. Pretending the world hasn’t rotted outside these concrete walls, pretending the rules still matter. The others around him—higher-ups, officers, men and women who hold titles that lost their meaning the day the world went to shit—are watching the spectacle with all the enthusiasm of a pack of vultures waiting for something to die.
It’s always been like this—marble floors and steel walls, designed to intimidate, to remind everyone sitting here of the authority they’ve willingly, or unwillingly, surrendered themselves to. The Future prides itself on order and control. On weeding out the weak. On pruning the unruly.
The General sits at the head of the room, his posture rigid, shoulders squared, the insignia on his chest gleaming under the fluorescent lights. Beside him, Sergeant Major Kim of Weapons Control has his mouth twisted into a sneer, his eyes like polished stone.
Jungwon knows this isn’t just a formality. It’s an execution, dressed up in procedure.
“I’m tired of tolerating his shit. So what if he’s a good shot? All the more he’ll turn the muzzle on one of us if he feels like it.” Sergeant Major Kim’s voice grates on Jungwon’s nerves, his words nothing more than polished venom, a slow, creeping poison meant to dismantle anyone who steps out of line.
It’s been a solid forty-five minutes since Sergeant Major Kim started making his case against Jay. Not just any case, either. A full-blown, meticulously constructed argument, layered with every possible sin Jay might have committed. Insurbodination. Recklessness. Endangering his comrades during an infiltration of a new community not far from HQ.
Jungwon’s jaw tightens as he listens, only half paying attention to the string of accusations that drip from the Sergeant Major’s mouth. It’s all politics. It’s all bullshit. They’re clinging to some sense of order, some desperate attempt to pretend they have control when the world has already slipped from their grasp.
“Private First Class Park is a liability. Reckless, undisciplined, and worst of all, disobedient. We give orders and he questions them. We set boundaries and he oversteps them. That’s not someone we can rely on.”
The words are familiar. They echo the same rhetoric Jungwon has heard in every damn meeting about Jay. The same tired complaints, the same frustrations disguised as grievances.
But something is different this time. There’s a finality to Sergeant Major Kim’s tone. A hunger for punishment.
Jungwon’s fingers drum against his thigh, the motion so slight it’s almost imperceptible. Outwardly, he remains calm, collected, his expression one of neutrality. But his mind is anything but.
The General leans forward, his hands clasped together on the table before him. “Expulsion has been discussed in the past.” His voice is measured, dispassionate. “But now, the situation has escalated.”
Jungwon’s jaw clenches. Escalated. That’s one way to put it.
Jay’s a good shot. Too good. His skill with a rifle has saved lives more times than anyone can count, his quick thinking turning the tide of more battles than the council has the nerve to acknowledge. And his mouth—well, his mouth is the part they can’t seem to stomach. The bluntness. The refusal to bow to authority when that authority is nothing more than a fragile facade.
Jay had defied orders, yes. Had disregarded direct commands during the last infiltration mission. But Jay’s reasons were sound. Ethical, even. The community they were raiding had families—innocent people trying to survive, same as them. Jay had pushed back, refused to partake in what he deemed an unnecessary massacre. And in doing so, he’d broken the one unspoken rule The Future held above all else—obedience.
“His actions jeopardise the integrity of our system. His insubordination is not only dangerous, but infectious.” Sergeant Major Kim’s eyes narrow, his gaze sweeping over the room like he’s daring anyone to disagree.
Jungwon doesn’t. Not outwardly. Not yet.
“Expulsion is the only logical course of action.” Sergeant Major Kim’s voice is calm, collected. “Unless someone can offer a viable alternative.”
The silence is thick, stifling. No one speaks. No one dares to.
But Jungwon can feel it—something coiling in his gut, hot and sharp and undeniable. A warning. A decision.
Expulsion.
He can’t get the word out of his head. They’re going to throw Jay out. Cut him off from their little makeshift organisation like he’s nothing more than a diseased limb that needs to be amputated. And Jungwon knows what happens to those who are expelled. It’s a death sentence. Maybe not right away, but eventually.
Because the world out there doesn’t care if you were once part of a structured society. It doesn’t care if you were skilled or strong or brave. It only cares about whether you can survive. And survival is a lot harder when you’re alone.
Jungwon’s eyes narrow, his mind racing. The General is speaking now, his voice calm and detached, as if he’s discussing nothing more than a routine supply run. But Jungwon catches the hesitation. The way his fingers drum against the table. The way his gaze shifts from the Sergeant Major to the others gathered around, gauging their reactions.
Politics. It’s always politics.
He needs to get out of here. He needs to think. His fingers tap harder against his thigh, his frustration simmering just beneath the surface. If they really expel Jay, if they really push him out into the world without resources, without allies—
Jungwon doesn’t know why the thought bothers him so much. Doesn’t know why his fists are clenched so tight his knuckles have turned white.
He’s been trained to follow orders. Conditioned to obey, to survive, to keep his head down and his mouth shut.
But for the first time, he’s not sure he can.
He takes a measured breath, his eyes fixed on the General’s. “Expulsion is a permanent solution to a temporary problem,” he says, his voice steady, deliberate. “Jay is reckless, yes. But he’s also resourceful. Skilled. Loyal.”
“Loyal to who, exactly?” Sergeant Major Kim cuts in, his smirk barbed. “Because from where I’m standing, his loyalties lie wherever his own moral compass points. And we can’t afford to keep someone around who values his own judgement above the chain of command.”
“Loyal to us,” Jungwon counters, his voice sharp enough to cut. “To me. And to the rest of our team.”
The words hang in the air, their weight undeniable. Jungwon can see the way the General’s gaze narrows, his fingers twitching ever so slightly as he considers.
“And what would you propose, Staff Sergeant Yang?” The General’s tone is cold, indifferent. “A slap on the wrist? A stern talking-to?”
Jungwon’s mind is already racing, the pieces clicking into place. He has to be careful. One wrong move and he’s signing Jay’s death warrant himself.
“No,” Jungwon says, his voice tight, controlled. “I suggest we redirect his skills. Use his rebellious nature to our advantage. Put him on tasks that require ingenuity and creativity. Give him the freedom to operate without compromising our security.”
“You aren’t just defending him because you know him personally, are you? Bias isn’t a good look in the military, Sergeant Yang.”
The words hit like a slap, sharp and cutting. Jungwon’s eyes narrow, his posture stiffening as he meets Sergeant Major Kim’s gaze head-on. The sneer twisting the man’s mouth makes Jungwon’s stomach churn. The accusation is there, laid bare for everyone in the room to see.
A murmur ripples through the room, low and treacherous. Judgemental eyes flicker his way—other officers, other officials. Faces he’s seen time and time again, most of them just waiting for him to slip. Because no matter how many times he proves his competence, his loyalty, his efficiency, there are always those who resent his place here. A twenty one-year-old commanding respect, making decisions that affect the lives of hundreds. It’s not natural, they say. It’s not fair.
“I’m defending him because he’s worth defending,” Jungwon says, his voice flat and calm, though his pulse thrums with irritation. “Jay’s unconventional, yes. But so are the challenges we’re facing. If we want to survive—if The Future wants to survive—we can’t afford to be rigid. We need people who think differently. People who aren’t afraid to act when the situation demands it.”
Sergeant Major Kim’s mouth twitches, his gaze turning flinty. “Acting on instinct isn’t the same as insubordination. The man is a liability. And if you can’t see that, perhaps your judgement isn’t as sound as we all thought.”
“Then give him a task that suits his skills,” Jungwon counters, refusing to let the Sergeant’s condescension sink beneath his skin. “Put him somewhere his resourcefulness can be an asset rather than a threat.”
“You’re missing the point, Sergeant,” Sergeant Major Kim drawls, like he’s explaining something obvious to a child. “This isn’t about skill. It’s about loyalty. It’s about control. And if Park can’t follow orders, then he doesn’t belong here.”
Jungwon’s teeth grind together. The committee’s eyes are on him, assessing, judging. He needs to tread carefully. One wrong word, and he’s not just condemning Jay—he’s signing away their entire group’s place in The Future.
“Sergeant Major Kim,” Jungwon says, voice tight, steady. “If you think that questioning orders is grounds for expulsion, then maybe you need to re-evaluate what you value more—obedience or survival. Because if you can’t adapt, if you can’t make use of the skills people bring to the table, then we’re not building a future at all. We’re just holding on to the past.”
The room goes silent. Eyes shift from Jungwon to Sergeant Major Kim, awaiting his response.
“You’re speaking out of line, Sergeant,” Sergeant Major Kim says, voice cold and clipped. “This is the military and you’re soldiers. Your sole purpose and duty is to follow orders. Your arrogance will be your downfall.”
“My pragmatism is what’s kept us alive,” Jungwon snaps back before he can stop himself. The words hang heavy in the air, his defiance stark against the sterile, calculated atmosphere of the room.
A beat of silence stretches, and Jungwon can feel his own heartbeat pounding against his ribs, his fingers curling into fists at his sides.
The General clears his throat, cutting through the tension like a blade. “Enough. This discussion has gone on long enough.” His eyes flicker towards Jungwon, unreadable. “Sergeant Yang has made his case. We will deliberate and make our decision by the end of the week.”
A dismissal.
The others begin to file out of the room, some casting Jungwon wary glances, others looking almost impressed. But he pays them no mind. His focus is on Sergeant Major Kim, who lingers by the doorway, gaze still locked on Jungwon with the intensity of a predator sizing up its prey.
“Bias or not, Yang,” Kim says, voice low and venomous. “You’ve just tied yourself to a sinking ship. And when it drags you down, I won’t be there to pull you out.”
The words are a threat. And for the first time since Jungwon walked into this room, he feels the ice creeping into his veins.
But his expression remains impassive, his shoulders squared, his eyes unwavering. He doesn’t respond. Doesn’t let the Sergeant Major see even a flicker of fear. Because he knows now what he has to do.
Jay’s expulsion isn’t a question of if. It’s a question of when.
And Jungwon will be damned if he lets them take his friend without a fight.
As he leaves the room, his mind is already churning, thoughts clicking into place with ruthless precision. If The Future wants to cast Jay out, then fine. They’ll be leaving together.
And there’s nothing—no threat, no authority, no crumbling society—that will stop him.
The hum of fluorescent lights buzzes faintly overhead, muffled by the thick concrete walls of the auxiliary storage bay. The place is empty—technically off-limits after curfew, which makes it perfect for the conversation Jungwon doesn’t want anyone else to hear.
Jay’s leaning against a stack of ration crates, arms crossed, posture defiant in that quietly confrontational way of his. His expression, though unreadable, holds a kind of lazy edge—like he already knows why Jungwon’s here and doesn’t care.
“I take it this isn’t a supply check,” Jay says, tilting his head.
Jungwon steps in, letting the heavy door shut behind him with a dull thud. His voice is low, steady. Controlled, but fraying at the edges. “What the hell were you thinking?”
Jay doesn’t move. “You’ll have to be more specific. I think a lot of things.”
“You disobeyed a direct order, Jay. You blew the infiltration on the west community. Sergeant Major Kim is calling for expulsion.”
At that, Jay’s eyes narrow. “They were unarmed civilians, Jungwon. Not raiders. Families. Kids. We weren’t just ‘infiltrating,’ we were planning to strip them dry and leave them vulnerable.”
“That’s not your call to make.”
Jay scoffs. “Says the guy who helped design half the tactics we use to screw those people over.”
Jungwon’s jaw tightens, and for a moment, the silence is razor-sharp between them. Then he steps forward, closing the distance until there’s nowhere left to hide behind words or sarcasm.
“I told them you weren’t a threat. I vouched for you, Jay. Sat in that goddamn courtroom and played the perfect little soldier so they wouldn’t put you on the list.”
Jay flinches—barely—but Jungwon catches it.
“You think you're some kind of saviour because you questioned one order? You’re not. You’re reckless. You’re lucky they’re only talking expulsion and not something worse.”
“They’re wrong,” Jay bites out. “And you know it.”
“I do,” Jungwon says quietly. “But that doesn’t change the fact that you fucked up. You made yourself a target. And now… now I can’t protect you anymore.”
There’s a beat of silence where neither of them says anything.
And then Jungwon’s voice lowers further, like the weight of what he’s about to say is too heavy to carry out loud.
“I’m thinking of leaving.”
Jay’s head jerks up, brows drawing together. “What?”
“If they expel you, they’ll monitor the rest of us. And if they find even a trace of sympathy or dissent, we’re next. Me, Jake, Sunghoon, Ni-ki, Sunoo, Heeseung... all of us.”
Jay stares at him, eyes unreadable. “So that’s it? You’re just going to run?”
“No,” Jungwon breathes. “I’m going to take us out before they bury us.”
Another silence. This one charged. Heavier.
Jay’s voice softens, almost uncertain. “Does the rest of the group know?”
“Not yet. I’ll tell them when I figure out how to get us out without getting us all killed.”
That night, the air inside The Future’s inner walls felt unusually still—eerily subdued in a place that never truly slept. The soft hum of generators buzzed overhead, casting stark white light down the sterile hallways of the supply depot. It should have been louder—more movement, more noise, more bodies. But something was off.
Jungwon noticed it the moment he stepped inside.
There were fewer people on duty than protocol demanded. Only two stationed at the check-in desk, one watching the entrance, and none making rounds through the aisles. It wasn’t just a shift change lull—it was a skeleton crew, and they all looked like they hadn’t slept in days.
He didn’t ask why. Not at first. Asking questions in The Future was how you got assigned to more shifts, more silence, more suspicion.
But then he heard it.
Whispers. In the hallways. Low voices crackling over radios. Reports that the outbound retrieval unit—Team D4—never made it back on time. They’d been dispatched earlier that week to collect a shipment from a nearby survivor community.
But something had gone wrong.
According to murmurs passed between command and medbay, the team was ambushed. Overrun. The dead poured out of the treeline, faster and hungrier than anticipated. Out of twelve, only three returned. All injured. One of them shot in the leg. Another missing an arm. The third didn’t speak—just stared at the floor with blood still drying in his beard.
That explained the silence in the depot. The tension. The missing bodies. Everyone was stretched thin trying to fill the void the dead left behind.
It also explained why tonight—if they were ever going to do it—was the night.
Jungwon turned on his heel and made his way back to the lower barracks, where Jay was already waiting, sharpening the edge of a blade that technically wasn’t authorised for lower division use.
"Team D4?" Jay asked, not looking up.
“Most of them didn’t make it back,” Jungwon replied, voice low. “They’re short-staffed across all zones. Nobody’s looking at us tonight.”
Jay simply nodded.
Because they both knew. This was the window. The only one they might ever get.
And by morning, they wouldn’t be soldiers of The Future anymore. They’d be deserters.
Alive—for now.
But fugitives all the same.
The first night outside The Future feels like stepping onto another planet.
They move fast under the cover of darkness, adrenaline coursing through their veins, every footstep deliberate but uneven with nerves. The plan had been hastily drawn, but executed with terrifying precision—at least on Jungwon’s part. He hadn’t factored in the emotional weight that would follow the moment they drove past the barricade.
They’re not alone. A handful of others—faces half-familiar, half-forgotten—had taken the chance when Jungwon gave the signal. Deserters, they’re called now. Traitors, even. People clinging to the fragments of their humanity in a world that no longer rewards it.
They make camp in the remnants of an abandoned roadside diner. Dusty booths. Shattered windows. A place that probably once smelled of burnt grease and coffee. Tonight, it smells like mildew and ash.
Ni-ki tries to help set up makeshift beds from ripped upholstery while still casting anxious glances at the shadows outside. He’s the youngest, but he doesn’t complain. Just listens when Jungwon gives instructions. Follows every word like it’s law.
Jay sits by the boarded-up window, rifle across his lap. Silent. Watching.
And Jungwon—he doesn't sleep. Instead, he stands alone outside the back exit, staring into the trees, trying not to hear the voices in his head. The ones asking if he did the right thing. The ones whispering the names of the people he didn’t save. The ones asking if it’s worth it.
He doesn't have an answer.
But when he finally looks back at the diner, at the silhouettes of his friends—of his family—huddled together in the quiet, in the cold, something settles in his chest.
Back at The Future, they weren’t just surviving—they were thriving in the roles handed to them, performing with the kind of polished discipline The Future demanded.
Jake had earned his place in the treatment facility. Respected. Quietly feared, even. He had a mind for detail, a steady hand, and an ability to detach just enough to survive the sight of infected test subjects without flinching. He had a bed. A routine. The luxury of clean scrubs and indoor lighting. And yet, he walked away from it all.
Sunoo manned communications and supplies, his sharp tongue and sharper wit oddly perfect for keeping morale in check. He had access to inventory, conversations, coded maps—he knew where people were and what they needed. And he traded all of that in the second Jungwon came to him with the plan.
Ni-ki, though young, had embedded himself in logistics. Quiet. Observant. Efficient. He knew the flow of shipments and troop placements better than most commanding officers. He was becoming indispensable. But Ni-ki didn’t hesitate either.
Even Heeseung, who’d just been promoted to Head of Security two weeks before their escape—an elevation that came with more food, a locked quarters, and actual authority—chose to follow. He’d worked so hard for that title. And in the end, it meant nothing compared to the people he refused to leave behind.
Sunghoon was rising fast, too. A newly appointed drill instructor, his job was to sharpen recruits, to crush fear out of them and replace it with precision. His methods were harsh, but the soldiers he trained survived. He was well on his way to a permanent place in the system. Yet, he too joined the escape.
Because even with their ranks and privileges, they could all feel it: The Future was rotting from the inside out. The higher you climbed, the more of your soul you had to trade in for the view. They could see what was happening to them. To others. And in the end, they decided they'd rather run into the teeth of the dead than sit comfortably while everything human in them slipped away.
So when Jungwon offered them a way out, even those who had the most to lose didn’t hesitate. It wasn’t about leaving safety behind. It was about reclaiming something they’d forgotten they were allowed to have.
Freedom.
Now, that freedom tastes like blood and ash and sleepless nights, but it’s real.
For the first time in a long time, they get to choose who they are.
And that, they’ve decided, is worth everything.
Part 1
You shift against him in your sleep, and before he even realises it, your head has tilted until it’s resting lightly on his lap.
For a moment, he doesn’t move, barely breathes. Not because it’s uncomfortable. But because he doesn’t know what to do with this—this trust.
He glances down at your face—peaceful and still, completely unguarded. Your breathing is slow and even, lashes fluttering with whatever dream you’ve slipped into—it gnaws at something inside him, something dormant he thought he’d buried alongside the worst of who he used to be.
His fingers hover awkwardly over his knee before curling into a fist. It takes a second for his body to catch up—then another before his heart finally settles. The weight of you isn’t heavy. It’s… grounding, in a way. Familiar. Even though he doesn’t really know you.
Not yet, anyway.
It’s been a long time since he had a conversation like that with anyone. A real one. Not about supplies or patrols or plans. Not about death or survival. But about feelings. About fear. About loss.
It’s weird—talking to you. It shouldn’t be this easy. He barely knows you. You’re a stranger. But maybe that’s exactly why it’s easy. There’s no expectations, no history weighing things down. Just two people who’ve seen too much, said too little, and survived more than they should’ve.
Still, something about you makes him feel like he could be honest for once without having to pay for it later.
He thinks back to what he said earlier. About The Future. How he called them monsters. And you’d nodded, like you understood.
But you didn’t. Not really.
Because what you don’t know—what he didn’t say—is that when he talked about the coldness, the control, the cruelty, he wasn’t just talking about the system. He was talking about himself.
You’d looked at him like he was someone good. Like he was someone worth listening to. And he let you. He let you believe it. That’s the part that makes his stomach turn.
He watches your face now, how peaceful it looks, how easily you slipped into rest next to him like it was the most natural thing in the world. Like he hasn’t done things that would make your blood run cold.
The problem isn’t that he’s afraid you’ll figure him out. It’s that part of him doesn’t want you to. And that part—small and stubborn and stupid—is what terrifies him the most.
The moment he laid eyes on you in that auto shop, he could tell you weren’t from The Future. The sole fact that you were out here, exposed to the dangers of the world beyond those walls meant you weren’t from any of their civilian divisions. And if you were part of the military, He, Jay, Sunghoon, or Heeseung would have recognised you.
But it’s not just your unfamiliarity that confirms it. It’s the way you act. The way you talk. The way you still believe survival doesn’t have to come at the cost of decency.
You risked yourself to save him back at the motel, didn’t even hesitate. You’d offered him safety before yourself, with that determined look in your eye, like death was just another inconvenience you’d deal with later. You asked nothing in return. You didn’t walk away. And Jungwon doesn’t know what to do with that kind of goodness. That kind of blind, foolish courage.
You were the kind of person who still gave a shit. Who still held on to morality even when the world tried to beat it out of you. Who reached back for others when there was every reason to run. That kind of soul didn’t survive long in this world. People like you aren’t supposed to exist anymore. And yet… here you were—making everything he’s done harder to justify.
He knew then, for sure, that you weren’t one of them.
The Future didn’t make people like that.
No one who spent time under that regime would’ve wasted energy on strangers like that.
The camp is quiet. The kind of quiet that makes your thoughts louder, more unbearable. Somewhere below, Jungwon can hear Heeseung snoring faintly. The occasional shift of movement in the camp. But up here, it's just you, him, and a silence so thick it presses against his ribs.
Your head shifts slightly on his lap, your brows twitching faintly as if sensing his thoughts. He smooths a hand gently over your hair, careful not to wake you.
He swallows hard, eyes scanning the treeline beyond camp, trying to focus on anything other than the way his body feels too still, too aware. Like he’s being watched. Like he’s watching himself.
He should wake you. He should shift you off and remind you that trust is dangerous, that closeness is a liability. But he doesn’t. He stays still. He lets you sleep.
Not because he wants to. But because he can’t bring himself to interrupt the first quiet moment he’s had in months.
Still, something gnaws at him.
Not pity. He’s long since buried that. No, it’s something more restless. A low, crawling discomfort that settles beneath the surface of his skin.
He looks down at your sleeping form again, the faint rise and fall of your chest syncing with the rhythm of the wind brushing through the trees. His jaw tightens. He can’t describe it, but there’s a softness about you that reminds him of who he used to be. Who he still wants to be—
Someone who he had forgotten shortly after the world fell apart.
He finds comfort in that thought.
Part 2
The rations are lower than he’d hoped.
Jungwon crouches near the supply crates, fingers counting through the bags of dried grains and tins with fading labels. Heeseung’s estimate from earlier was right—they had enough to last a week if they were careful. Less, now, with one more mouth to feed. He doesn’t blame you, not really. It was his choice to let you stay. His burden to carry, his responsibility to manage. He just didn’t expect how fast everything would dwindle.
His eyes flicked toward you, sitting just a few feet away, chewing quietly on the last of the dried jerky. You didn’t know he’d seen the exchange between you and Heeseung. You didn’t need to. The guilt already lingered in your eyes like smoke.
He wasn’t angry. He understood. You weren’t deadweight. You pulled more than your share. But it didn’t change the math. Nothing ever changed the math.
He holds one of the dented cans in his palm, thumb brushing over the label, nearly worn down to nothing. He calculates quickly, quietly. Eight mouths, one meal a day, factoring in exhaustion and hunger—
They’d have to start scavenging. Soon.
Still, Jungwon keeps his face calm when he approaches Heeseung. His words are clipped, deliberate: “We’ll have to send a team out to hunt. Latest before noon.”
The others gather instinctively. No one questions it—it’s the way they’ve always operated. Without him barking orders, without a raised voice. He isn’t their leader by title, but by necessity. By trust earned through blood and bone and all the things he’s never said aloud. He stands where others hesitate, and they follow because he always brings them back. He always calculates the outcome.
Except now, the variable is you.
He watches the way Jay glares at you, a quiet resentment simmering under the surface. It’s not even subtle anymore. The jab lands—“We do have one more mouth to feed”—and Jungwon feels a flicker of something hot rise in his chest. Not quite anger. Not yet. But something protective. Something unfamiliar.
He didn’t even need to look at you to know that you took that hit without flinching. You’d gotten good at that—pretending you’re fine. It annoys him. Because he could see through it.
“Jay,” he said simply.
It was enough. Jay looked away, but not before Jungwon saw the frustration still simmering behind his eyes.
“I’ll go,” you say, your voice slicing through the tension. Jungwon’s gaze snaps to you immediately, eyes narrowing. The suggestion is unexpected, and he doesn’t like surprises—not when it comes to survival. But you’re already explaining yourself, calm and rational, just like the first time he heard you speak in that busted-up auto shop. That same fire, the same grit. You weren’t lying then, and he doesn’t think you are now.
Still, he challenges you. “You?”
You don’t back down. “You need every fighter you can spare here, and I can handle myself.”
There’s no hesitation in your eyes. No flinch. It’s not a bluff—it’s a debt. You’re trying to repay them, even if you don’t realise that’s what it is. Jungwon recognises the expression. He’s worn it himself before, back when guilt used to be sharp and fresh instead of dull and persistent.
When the volunteers step forward—Heeseung, then Jay—Jungwon watches closely. Jay’s distrust is expected. Heeseung’s trust is reassuring. But it still doesn’t sit right with him.
So he steps forward too. “I’ll go.”
But the moment the words leave his mouth, you’re already challenging him again.
“No, you can’t go.”
And that stuns him more than it should.
He watches you, something unreadable flickering in his eyes. You step in closer, your voice low and measured, as if you know that contradicting him in front of the others is dangerous—but you do it anyway. Because you’re not afraid of him. Because you believe what you’re saying.
“They need you here,” you whisper. “They’re rattled. They need their leader.”
And maybe it’s the exhaustion, or maybe it’s the way your eyes meet his like you’ve known him longer than you have, but Jungwon hesitates. Just for a second. Just long enough to admit to himself that you’re right.
He couldn’t let them fall apart again. Not like before.
His silence is his answer.
“All right,” he concedes at last, softer than the others expect. “But don’t take unnecessary risks. If it looks bad, you come back. Understood?”
He doesn’t know why he says it that way. Not “be careful.” Not “watch each other’s backs.” No, his concern is aimed at you specifically, and that confuses him.
Jungwon watches the group disperse to prepare. The fire’s gone out, and the morning chill begins to creep through the trees. You’re already tying your boots, already too far from him to see the way his jaw clenches as he watches the way you glance around at the others like you were memorising them. It unsettles him. Like you were saying goodbye.
That’s when Jungwon pulls Jay aside, his steps quiet but deliberate as he angles them just out of earshot from the others. The moment feels heavy, calculated. Not a command—but close.
“Make sure she comes back,” Jungwon says, voice low but firm.
Jay’s head snaps toward him, blinking like he’s not sure he heard right. “What?”
“You heard me.”
Jay’s head tilts slightly, disbelief flickering across his features. “You can’t be serious. I’m not her babysitter.”
“I’m not asking you to babysit,” Jungwon replies, his voice steady, eyes scanning the trees ahead. “I’m asking you to make sure she doesn't run off.”
Jay scoffs, folding his arms across his chest. “Why? What’s so special about her?”
Jungwon’s jaw tightens, but he doesn’t flinch. “You’ve seen the way she moves. She’s adaptable. Resourceful. Smart. Doesn’t hurt to have someone like that around.”
Jay lets out a dry, humourless laugh. “So what? That doesn’t mean she’s not a threat. You really think you can trust someone who showed up out of nowhere? Remember what happened the last time we trusted somebody? I lost Ji–” Jay cuts himself off, suddenly conscious of his voice raising.
There’s a beat of silence. Jay knows there’s no point arguing with Jungwon, not when he’s already convinced you are some kind of saviour sent down from the heavens. So, he exercises the only form of discontent he can manage by shaking his head and muttering something under his breath before stalking off to grab his pack.
Jungwon doesn’t call after him. Instead, his eyes drift back to you—your silhouette against the trees, knife sheathed, shoulders squared. You don’t look back. You never do. And that unsettles him more than it should.
Because for all his planning, for all the careful equations he ran in his head—the tactical choices, the contingencies—he never planned for you. Never anticipated the weight of your presence. Never accounted for the way you made the lines between logic and instinct blur. And no matter how he frames it in his mind—no matter how much he tries to reduce you to a number, a risk factor, a variable in a larger equation—he can’t.
You don’t fit. You’re not the plan.
And yet, you’re already part of it.
Part 3
Jungwon can feel the tension rising before anyone speaks—like a storm pressing down on the air, suffocating and inevitable.
He watches you carefully, your fingers curling slightly against your palm, your shoulders square despite the weariness clinging to your frame. You’re pushing. Offering. Volunteering to go in someone’s place. Again. It’s not the first time you’ve done something like this, but it still hits differently now.
He knows what you’re doing. You’re trying to prove something—not just to them, but to yourself.
And then there’s Jay.
“This is insane,” Jay scoffs from where he leans against a tree, arms crossed, eyes hard. “We barely know her, and you want to let her go off into the village?”
The words hit exactly how Jungwon expects them to. He doesn’t move, just watches the way your jaw tightens—just a fraction, but he sees it.
He waits for Jake’s voice. Right on cue.
“Jay,” Jake says without even looking up, his tone sharp and steady. “Again. Not your place to speak.”
It’s almost funny, the way Jake can silence a room. Almost. If the air weren’t already thick with leftover tension. And in his defense, Jake’s anger is not completely misplaced. Jungwon lets the silence linger, lets it press down on the group, watches the way Jay shifts his stance and glances off to the side, jaw clenching.
You take a breath, and Jungwon instinctively shifts his focus to you again.
“Trust me,” you say, and it’s the way you say it—steady but hollow—that pulls something taut in his chest. “Or better yet, don’t trust me. If anything goes wrong, it’s easier to leave me behind anyway.”
The words land like a stone in his gut. For a second, he doesn’t move. Doesn’t breathe.
Guilt. It coils in Jungwon’s chest like smoke, slow and suffocating. It’s not an emotion he’s allowed himself to feel in a long time—not when he needed to stay sharp, decisive, calculated. And yet, there it is, curling through his ribs the moment your words slip out.
Because he’s thought about it.
He’s thought it, and he hates that he has. It’s how he’s survived this long. Know the numbers. Know the odds. Know when to cut your losses. He’s always been that kind of person. Tactical. Strategic. Even now, even when he tells himself he’s changed, his mind still drifts to the math of survival. He’s still capable of thinking in loss ratios and calculated sacrifices. Still carrying remnants of the machine he once served.
But when you say it—not coldly, but as if you’ve accepted it already—it doesn’t feel like survival. It feels like cruelty.
It’s not just about your willingness to risk yourself. It’s the fact that, deep down, he’d allowed himself to believe it too. And that makes him feel like a monster all over again.
His gaze flicks around the group. Heeseung looks away. Sunoo’s lips are pressed into a thin line. Even Jay shifts uncomfortably.
They’ve all thought it too, haven’t they?
Still, your words echo in his mind, louder than anything else.
It’s easier to leave me behind anyway.
So when he speaks, when he says “Don’t joke about that,” it’s not just to you. It’s to himself. A warning. A plea. Because he doesn’t want to be that person anymore. Doesn’t want to weigh your life like a number on a chart.
And for the first time, he realises: you’re not just another survivor to be measured and managed. You’re something he doesn’t know how to carry—but he wants to try.
So he makes the decision now, quietly, without anyone knowing.
He wants you to come back.
No matter the cost.
The siphon’s slow. Too slow. Jungwon watches the steady trickle of fuel through the tube like it might suddenly stop working, like if he looks away, everything could go to shit again. The sky’s still wrapped in the pale grey of morning, but the air smells like heat’s coming. Another scorcher, probably.
He doesn't look at you or Jay—he keeps his gaze trained on the canister. Keeps his hands steady. Keeps everything steady.
Then your voice cuts through the quiet. "It might not mean anything, but I would’ve done it too.”
Jungwon’s head turns before he can help it. You’re not looking at him—you’re looking at Jay. And Jay, who’s standing on the other side of the tractor, squints at you, clearly caught off guard.
He didn’t understand it at first, but then you say it: “Going after him—I mean.”
And everything freezes for a second.
Jay’s expression shifts. Hardens. “You don’t have to lie to comfort me. I know what I did was wrong.”
Jungwon watches you quietly, his fingers curled into fists beside him. His pulse is steady, but something in his chest tightens. There’s a fire in your voice—not rage, not grief, but something deeper. Something rooted. You speak like someone who’s already lived with loss. Too much of it.
Jungwon doesn't move, but his mind has already left the field. It's spiralling, fast. You’ve done something to him again—upended the quiet order he relies on to stay sane. The structure. The roles. The carefully drawn lines he’s used to separating emotion from survival. You, with your raw words and unwavering eyes, walk right through them.
“But even if you think it’s wrong, you don’t regret it.”
The way you say it... Jungwon flinches inwardly. Because it’s not just a statement. It’s a mirror. And for a moment, he sees his own reflection staring back through the cracks—every line of guilt etched beneath your voice. He’s not even sure who you’re talking to anymore. Jay? Yourself? Him?
Jay tenses, trying to keep that wall up, but it’s already thinning. “What are you trying to say?”
You don’t even blink. “What I’m trying to say is, what you’re feeling is valid. If it were up to me, I would’ve shot him in both ankles. Make sure he couldn’t run to begin with.”
Jungwon’s chest tightens. The field goes quiet.
Jay shoots him a look. “You’re not scared to say that? In front of him?”
You turn slightly. Just enough to meet Jungwon’s gaze. He doesn’t react, not outwardly. But inwardly, there’s a small ripple beneath the surface. Because that’s the second time this morning you’ve challenged something—first his orders, now his image.
“Why would I be?”
He doesn’t answer. He doesn’t need to. His silence is answer enough. Because no matter how steady he looks, he feels everything ripple underneath—this fracture between who he was and who he wants to be. Between the person who signed off on raids and the person standing here now, listening to you speak like someone who’s survived both sides of the war.
Jay exhales through his nose, like he’s trying not to let something else slip. “You probably already figured it out, but the whole point of this group—the way Jungwon leads us—is to make sure we don’t become the monsters we ran away from. Whatever Jake or the others feel about what I did… that’s valid.”
Jungwon wants to correct him. Wants to tell him that he’s not leading anyone. That he’s just trying to keep the wheels turning long enough for someone else—anyone else—to take over. But he doesn’t. He keeps his eyes on the canister, his fists tight enough that his knuckles start to blanch.
Because Jay’s not entirely wrong. Jungwon is supposed to be the anchor. The one who holds them together, who balances risk and morality like it’s simple math. But even now, hearing it out loud—that he’s the one meant to stop them from falling too far—feels like a lie. A fragile one at best. He’s barely holding himself together as it is. And it’s only about to get harder now that you’re here, making him question things he thought he’d buried.
You speak again, quieter this time. “If I saw someone I love die in front of me, I’d do much more than just shoot someone in the ankle.”
And that sentence? That one stays with him.
Because it reminds him that he doesn’t know who you’ve lost. Doesn’t know how close your grief is to the surface. But whatever it is, it’s carved into your spine. There’s a weight behind your words that’s too heavy to fake.
Jay goes still. “Yeah… it doesn’t bring her back, though.”
“No,” you reply gently. “It doesn’t.”
Silence again. Not heavy this time—just worn. Weathered.
The wind picks up, brushing the overgrown stalks around them. Jungwon’s eyes flick to you. You’re still calm, composed. But there’s a sadness in you too. One he hadn’t noticed before.
“But,” you add, “you seem to forget that it’s also human to want justice. Or revenge. Whatever you want to call it.”
Jungwon watches the way Jay’s expression softens. Just barely. The way your voice threads through the space like balm and blade all at once. And all he can think is that this is what scares him the most. Not that you’re reckless. Not that you challenge him. But that you feel so deeply, and still haven’t hardened yourself into something else. That you’re still fighting like it means something.
Jay mutters, “Justice or revenge… depends on who’s telling the story.”
You nod once. “Or who’s left to tell it.”
It’s a brutal thing to say, but it isn’t cruelty he hears in your voice—it’s clarity. Cold, sharp clarity born of a world where justice and revenge are no longer separate concepts. And what scares him isn’t your willingness to say it. It’s how much he agrees.
Jungwon doesn’t look away. Not now. Because there’s something in you, in the way you speak—raw, candid, without hesitation—that gnaws at his chest. The others follow orders, look to him for structure. But you?
You keep challenging the narrative.
Jay’s shoulders loosen. His eyes drop. “I don’t know what that makes me, though. A monster or just… someone who’s trying to survive.”
And that’s when Jungwon finally speaks.
“It makes you someone who’s still here. Someone who’s still fighting. That’s all that matters.”
His voice is level. Measured. But it rings hollow in his own ears. Because the truth is, it’s a reminder meant for himself just as much as for Jay. Because when you joked earlier about being easy to leave behind, it wasn’t funny—not to him. It was a reminder. That he’s calculating again. Risk versus reward. Just like before. Just like The Future trained him to be. You could’ve died, and he weighed it like an equation.
And even now, he’s still calculating.
But for the first time, he doesn’t want the answer. Because the numbers don’t reflect what’s clawing at him now—the feeling that if something happened to you, the loss wouldn’t be strategic.
It would be personal.
You pick up the tube, pull it free from the tank, and screw the cap back on. Jay lifts the canister, nods once, and starts heading back toward the road without another word.
You and Jungwon walk side by side now. He keeps a few paces from you, but every now and then, his eyes flicker to your profile. You don’t speak. Neither does he. But the silence between you is louder than it used to be.
It unsettles him.
Because just days ago, you were a stranger in the shadows. Another mouth. Another risk. A variable Jungwon wasn’t prepared for. Someone he would’ve discarded in the past, or worse—filed under liability and moved on. Back then, in The Future, everything was numbers. Resources. Probability. Sacrifices. Names didn’t matter. Faces didn’t matter. And you?
You were never supposed to matter.
But now you’re this—this raw, unpredictable thing that keeps catching him off guard. Every time you speak, every time you meet his gaze without flinching, something in him shifts. Rearranges. Like you’re tugging at wires he didn’t know were still connected.
You challenge him—his leadership, his orders, his silence. You don’t do it with arrogance or anger. You do it with honesty. With conviction. With a quiet kind of strength that doesn’t come from training or hierarchy, but from survival. And somewhere along the way, without permission or warning, you've slipped between the cracks of his guarded exterior.
He hates that.
Not because you’re dangerous.
But because you’re not.
Because you remind him of the part of himself he’s spent years burying—the part that wants to believe there’s still something worth protecting that doesn’t serve a strategic advantage. That maybe, just maybe, not everything needs to be calculated. That there are people who still make choices because it feels right, not because the odds are in their favour.
And worse, it mirrors your own thoughts—how just hours earlier, you convinced yourself that walking away would be the safest thing. That leaving them, leaving him, was the right call. Not because you didn’t care, but because you cared too much. Because you’ve seen what happens when you let people in. What it costs.
You told yourself you’d repay them, that you’d disappear before they grew to trust you. Before you grew to trust them. Before the roots took hold.
But they already have. He sees it in the way you offer to hunt, to siphon gas, to carry your weight and more. He sees it in the way you speak to Jay—not with contempt, but with understanding. He sees it, and it frightens him.
Because you’re not just surviving—you’re still human.
And in a world where humanity is often a liability, you are living proof that some parts of it are worth saving. You are proof that maybe he’s not too far gone. That maybe he doesn’t have to bury every soft part of himself to lead.
It’s maddening.
Because this isn’t how it was supposed to go. You weren’t supposed to get under his skin. He wasn’t supposed to feel anything other than the instinct to keep the group alive. He wasn’t supposed to look at you and think—
Not her. Not if I can help it.
But the thought is there. It has been for a while. And now, no matter how he tries to push it down, it keeps resurfacing.
Because for all his structure and restraint, you’ve introduced something volatile.
Hope.
Part 4
The van bumps down the cracked road, the scent of Jay’s blood thick in the air, the silence louder than the groans fading behind them. Jungwon sits rigid in the passenger seat, fists clenched on his thighs, jaw tight. He hasn’t spoken since they pulled away. Not even when the two men started running after them. Not even when one of them screamed, “Please! We didn’t want it to go this far!”
He hears you, though. The urgency in your voice when you say, “They’re unarmed. They’re not a threat.” You say it like you believe it. Like you need it to be true.
But Jungwon doesn’t answer. Can’t. Because if he opens his mouth, he’s afraid of what might come out.
Because the truth is, he doesn't know anymore.
He used to. Back in The Future, everything was black and white. You either secured the mission or you didn’t. You either survived or you didn’t. There were no in-betweens. No compromises. No emotional attachments to blur the lines.
But that world didn’t have you in it.
You, who looked the man who shot Jay in the eyes and still hesitated to pull the trigger. You, who dared to say out loud what he’s been burying since day one—that if any of them died, he wouldn’t be rational about it. That if you had collapsed into that field with a bullet in your chest, if Jay had died protecting you, Jungwon doesn’t know what he would’ve done. What line he might’ve crossed.
And that terrifies him.
Because now he knows. You were right.
If any of you had died, he would’ve hunted them all down without a second thought. No calculation. No strategy. Just blood. Just rage.
He knows in the marrow of his bones that he wouldn’t have left survivors. Wouldn’t have spared the two men running after the van, wouldn’t have let anyone surrender. A bullet through the head wouldn’t have been justice. It would’ve been the highest form of mercy he was capable of offering in that moment. Because there wouldn’t be room for compassion. Or mercy. Or even thought.
Only vengeance.
The van rumbles on, Ni-ki’s knuckles white around the wheel. Sunghoon is silent, his eyes fixed on the floor. Sunoo looks sick. Heeseung hasn’t moved from Jay’s side. Jake is still pressing down on the wound, hands trembling. They’re all unravelling.
And it’s his fault.
Because the thing he never accounted for—the variable he couldn’t predict—was what would happen if he started to care.
Now he knows.
Caring makes one reckless.
Caring makes one hesitate.
Caring makes one pull the trigger for someone else and never quite recover from it.
He watches the woods blur past the window. Thinks about the woman who died. The men who tried to kill you. The man who shot Jay. The two who begged for their lives. The part of himself that wanted to give them a chance. And the part that didn’t.
He hears you shift beside him, hears the way your breath shakes as you whisper, “We’ve crossed a line.”
He doesn’t respond.
Because he’s still trying to figure out when exactly he lost sight of it. All he knows is that this—this sickness in his chest, this silent weight pressing against his lungs—is the cost. The toll you pay when you start thinking with your heart instead of your head.
He should’ve never let that happen.
But he did.
Because of you.
Because somewhere between your barbed honesty and quiet defiance, between the way you look at this world like it hasn’t fully beaten you down yet—he let his guard slip.
He doesn’t want to feel this way. Doesn’t want to feel anything. Emotions get people killed. Emotions make you weak. He knew that once. Lived by it.
But now?
Now he’s watching the person beside him become someone they don’t recognise. Just like he did. Just like they all did.
When Jungwon said “I did it for me,” he wasn’t trying to sound cold. He wasn’t trying to push you away.
What he meant—what he couldn’t say in that moment—is that he pulled the trigger so you wouldn't have to.
Because if you had taken that shot—if you had crossed that line—you wouldn’t have come back from it. Not really. Not the way you are now. Not the version of you that still believes in something more than just survival. The version that still pauses before pulling the trigger, that still sees people instead of threats. That still tries.
And that version of you? That fragile, lone, dandelion still clinging to the cracks in this rotted world?
He couldn’t let that die.
Not when you were the first person in a long, long time to make him question who he was outside of tactics and duty. Not when you were the first person to look at him and not just see the soldier, the strategist, the boy bred by The Future to be a weapon—but someone worth saving too.
So yes. He did it for you.
But more selfishly?
He did it so he wouldn’t have to watch you become someone you’re not. He did it so you could stay as somebody who is kind and innocent. Somebody who inspires him to be a better person. You’re not a monster. And he’ll do everything he can to keep it that way.
Because watching that kind of light go out in someone like you?
That would’ve destroyed him.
And he’s already too far gone to survive another kind of loss like that.
Jungwon doesn't know how they got here so fast. One moment he hears them—low groans bleeding through the trees like a warning—and the next he’s pulling you through a sea of rusted cars, adrenaline screaming through his veins. His grip on your wrist is tight, desperate. He doesn’t look back. He doesn’t have to. The dead are close. Too close.
He finds the lorry purely on instinct, tossing you up before you even have time to catch your breath. The edge of it scrapes his palms as he climbs up after you, then yanks the tattered tarp over both of you in one swift motion, plunging the space into shadow.
Your voice rises, a startled whisper, but he cuts it off with his hand pressed lightly over your mouth—not harsh, just firm. His other arm braces over you, holding himself there as the first chorus of groans rolls past the truck.
It’s suffocating, the way the air thickens with decay and tension. The sound of their dragging feet fills his ears, an endless wave of hunger just inches away. The metal beneath him vibrates with the weight of it—the horde moving past like a tide of death. If even one of them hears you breathe too loudly, it’s over.
So he holds his breath. And he holds you.
Your chest rises and falls beneath him, the quickened rhythm of fear making your whole body tremble. You’re shaking, but you’re trying to be brave—trying to stay still despite the instinct to run. He feels your shoulder tucked under his arm, the way your hand clutches at the fabric of his jacket, whether you mean to or not.
He doesn’t look. Not at first.
He’s too busy listening—calculating the distance, counting the footsteps. But when the sound starts to fade, when the worst of them pass and only the stragglers remain, something in him shifts. He glances down.
And he sees you.
Really sees you.
The dim light filtering through the moth-eaten holes in the tarp spills soft patterns across your face—highlighting the curve of your cheek, the flutter of your lashes as you fight to keep your eyes closed. There’s dirt on your skin, a smear of something across your jaw, but you still look... beautiful. Fragile, in a way he doesn’t know how to stomach. It makes his chest ache.
Because he remembers the drugstore. Remembers the exact second he almost lost you.
He remembers the scream—the sound of you calling his name, the thud of your body slamming into the hatch frame, the sickening moment when a rotted hand grabbed your ankle and yanked you back toward death. He’d never moved so fast in his life. Never fired a shot with such fury. He pulled you out of that hatch with every ounce of strength he had left, your blood smearing across his palms, your gasps digging into his ribs like knives.
You could’ve died back there. And the truth is—he wouldn’t have survived it.
And now, lying here in the silence after the storm, your breath brushing his collarbone, your body curled so unconsciously against his—it hits him all over again. The closeness. The danger. The way your hand just curled a little tighter into his jacket.
You shift slightly, and he instinctively pulls you closer, one hand sliding to cradle the back of your head. “Stop moving,” he murmurs against your hair, his voice barely more than breath.
He expects you to flinch. To pull away.
You don’t.
Instead, you press your cheek closer to his chest, your breath steadying, syncing with his. And it feels like something clicks into place—something that shouldn’t. Something dangerous.
Because in a world like this, closeness is a luxury. Tenderness is a risk. And you… you are a risk he never meant to take.
But lying here now, with the world rotting just inches away, he can’t find it in himself to regret it. Not when your heartbeat thuds against his ribs. Not when you’ve buried your fear in the safety of his arms.
He doesn’t move. Doesn’t speak. Just listens to the dying groans fade into the distance, holding you like you’re the last good thing in this godforsaken world.
Part 5
Jungwon sits on the rooftaop long after the sun has risen, legs bent, arms draped loosely over his knees, the rifle resting at his side, untouched. The morning air is crisp, and the sky above is a pale, uncertain blue—washed-out and faded like a painting left out in the rain. Even the clouds seem hesitant, lingering low and unmoving, as though the weather itself is unsure whether to weep or stay dry.
From his perch, he has a clear view of the road—the same one you walked away on just an hour ago. It winds past the edge of the camp, disappearing into the hoizon like a thread unraveled too far to follow. And even though he knows better, even though he tells himself not to expect anything, he watches that path like it owes him something. Like maybe if he stares hard enough, you’ll come walking back. That some part of you might still choose to return.
But you don’t.
And he doesn’t look away.
The breeze brushes against him, tugging gently at his hair, but he makes no move to push it aside. His body is still, but his mind is anything but.
He's been up here since you turned your back on him and walked away, since he realised you were gone for good. He didn’t go back down, didn’t speak to the others when they woke up, didn’t offer an explanation. He didn’t have the words. He still doesn’t. Because if he says it out loud—if he lets the sound of your absence cross his lips—he’s afraid something inside him will crack so deep it’ll never be put back together.
So he sits.
And he watches.
And he thinks.
About the things you said to each other. Words thrown like knives in the dark, sharp and bitter and honest in the ugliest ways. He thinks about how your voice broke when you told him you couldn’t stay, how your shoulders trembled with the weight of the choice you were making. He thinks about how you looked when you said you couldn’t lose them—couldn’t lose him.
There was a look in your eyes then—a look he’d never seen before. Not even when Jay nearly died. That time, you were reckless. This time, there’s a look of desperation, grief, something close to love and even closer to fear. Not the kind of fear that comes from facing the dead. The kind that comes from having something to lose.
It’s strange—the silence that follows. It’s not rage. Not yet. Not grief, either. It's a kind of stillness. The kind that presses against the inside of your ribs, caught in the base of your throat like a sob that never quite makes it out.
He feels it settle into him like a sickness. A slow, crawling thing that starts in his gut and moves outward, hollowing him out.
You lied.
That’s the first thought that really stings. You stood there, looked him in the eye and said you’d stay. That you’d help carry the burden. That he wasn’t alone.
And now you’re gone.
He leans forward slightly, elbows resting on his knees, the sun casting a faint glow across his face. It should feel warm. It doesn’t. Nothing feels warm anymore.
He remembers how your voice shook and how you avoided looking into his eyes when you said you never meant to care. Thinks about the way you flinched when he accused you of being no different from those who left you. The way you looked like you wanted to scream and collapse all at once.
You think he’s good. You told him he was the one holding everything together. That they follow him not because they have to, but because they trust him. Because he’s him.
But you don’t see it the way he does.
They follow him because there’s no one else. Because someone has to make the hard calls. Someone has to carry the weight. And he does. Not because he’s good. But because he’s still standing. That’s all it is.
The good ones are the ones who don’t make it. The ones who hesitate. The ones who don’t pull the trigger.
But Jungwon? He pulled the trigger the moment the world went to shit. And he’s been pulling it ever since.
You're not like him. You're better. Or maybe you were. Maybe he just didn’t want to watch that final part of you die.
But the truth is—you’re not good either. Not really. You’ve lied. You’ve stolen. You’ve done things you’re not proud of. You’ve chosen survival over strangers more times than you’ve admitted. You hold the blade just as well as he does.
He knows that now.
You think he’s good, and he thinks you are.
But the truth? You’re both just survivors, trying to hold onto what little scraps of humanity you still have left. You're not good. Not anymore. Maybe not ever. But that doesn’t mean you’re monsters either.
Not yet.
Because what neither of you realised—what he’s only beginning to understand as he sits on this rooftop, staring out at the road you vanished down with an ache in his chest—is that the parts of yourselves you’re trying so hard to protect aren’t found in your own strength.
They’re found in each other.
You were his balance. The reminder that the weight could be shared. That maybe he didn’t have to carry it all alone. That maybe not every decision had to be cold and calculated. And he was your anchor. The reason you stayed longer than you should have. The one thing that made you second-guess running. He was the tether pulling you back to something human.
He grounded you. You softened him.
Neither of you were good. But together, you were better.
And that was enough.
Or it could have been.
He exhales slowly, the sound quiet against the breeze. His eyes don’t leave the road, even though it remains empty. His fingers curl against the rooftop's edge, digging into the concrete until his knuckles pale. The pain’s dulled now, no longer sharp—just a constant, aching throb, like a bruise you forget is there until you move the wrong way.
He should be used to this by now. People always leave. Always look out for themselves. That’s what the world has become. And he’s always known that. It’s why he never lets himself get too close.
But you were different.
You were the exception.
You were the moment he started to hope.
And now, standing there in the pale morning light, your name like a ghost on the back of his tongue, he feels something crack. Not loudly. Not visibly. But deeply.
You’re the greatest loss, Jungwon.
When you said that, he swore his heart was about to jump out of his chest. It wasn’t a goodbye. It was a confession. One wrapped in cowardice and fear. But a confession nonetheless.
And god, he wanted to believe that was enough.
But belief doesn’t change the fact that you still walked away. And Jungwon is left with the thought that he alone wasn't enough to convince you to stay.
He closes his eyes for a moment, letting the wind run through his hair, letting the world fall quiet again.
You’re gone and he’s still here. Still watching. Still waiting.
But the road stays empty and the rooftop stays quiet.
He just sits there, alone. Holding onto the last part of himself you hadn’t taken with you.
And hoping, quietly, that maybe—just maybe—wherever you are, you’re holding onto a piece of him too.
Part 6
The moment you say the word—bit—Jungwon feels the world tilt. It doesn’t make sense. Not immediately. He hears the word. Understands it. But the meaning doesn’t sink in. Not really. Not until he sees your arm.
The torn sleeve. The torn flesh.Teeth marks.
He goes still.
No air enters his lungs. No words form in his mouth. He just stares.
This isn’t happening.
He steps forward, slow and mechanical, like he’s walking through a dream—no, a nightmare—where his body no longer obeys him. Every instinct screams denial, but the evidence is right there, painted in your blood, mocking him.
“You’re lying,” he says.
Because you have to be. Because the alternative—the truth—splits something down the middle of his chest. He can feel it cracking, deep and irreversible.
But you’re not. And he sees it.
In the tremble of your fingers.
In the pale stretch of skin around the wound.
In Jay’s silence.
No. No. No.
The images of your death floods his vision and Jungwon swears he’s slowing losing his mind. He steps closer without thinking, fury and panic colliding in his chest. “Why?” His voice is a snarl now, strangled and broken.
You start to speak, but he cuts you off. He’s spiraling, his voice raw, hoarse, unraveling. “I told you to stay put inside. I told you. You never listen. Fuck–” His voice catches, his fists clench, and the words fall apart before they reach the end.
His hands fly to his head, fingers digging into his hair, tugging, trembling. He can’t hold it in—this storm rising inside him. It’s too much. Too loud. Too fast.
She’s bit. She’s bit. She’s fucking bit.
He sees the blood again—so much blood.
And all he can think is: I should’ve been faster. I should’ve been there. You’re dying and it’s my fault.
You apologise.
He wants to scream.
Because you’re apologising like it’s over. Like you’ve already accepted it. Like he’s just meant to stand here and watch you die.
He doesn't think.
There’s no calculation. No weighing the risks. No strategy. No logic. Because logic doesn’t exist in this moment—not when you’re standing there, blood soaking through your sleeve, skin pale and eyes resigned.
The world goes silent, deafeningly so.
And then, without thinking—without permission, without hesitation, without fear—he lets go of the rifle in his hands. It crashes to the rooftop, forgotten. Worthless.
His feet close the distance in a single breath.
He grabs you, pulls you into him like he’s trying to anchor himself to reality. One arm locks tightly around the back of your neck, the other cradles your head, his fingers threading into your hair, holding you against him like a lifeline.
It’s not careful. It’s not soft.
It’s desperate.
Crushing.
He doesn’t realise how hard he’s holding you until his arms begin to ache, until his breath shudders with the effort of keeping you close enough—close enough to feel you breathing. Close enough to feel your heartbeat. Close enough to convince himself you’re still here. Still his. Still alive.
His whole body is trembling. He presses his face into your shoulder, barely breathing, jaw clenched so tight it hurts. Your scent, your warmth—it’s all still here. Still real. Still you.
And it’s killing him.
Because this moment isn’t supposed to be happening.
You’re not supposed to be leaving. You’re not supposed to be dying.
His grip tightens, the pads of his fingers digging into your scalp like he can force your soul to stay through sheer contact alone.
He knows—god, he knows—he should let go. Should be the strong one. The leader.
But he can’t. Because he knows that if he lets go, you’ll start slipping away. And if you slip away—he might not survive it.
And the terrifying part?
He doesn’t think he wants to. Not if it means going back to a world that doesn’t have you in it.
It’s selfish.
But he doesn't care.
He’s breathing you in like this is the last time he’ll ever be able to. Like this is the last trace of warmth he’ll ever know. And maybe it is. Because this moment—this second in time where you’re still you—is slipping through his fingers, no matter how tightly he holds on.
And when he feels your arms slowly wrap around his waist, it shatters him. Because you’re comforting him. You’re steadying him when you’re the one who’s dying.
It’s too much.
Your fingers twist into his shirt, creasing the fabric. He holds you tighter in response, burying his face in your hair, letting the scent of ash and blood and you consume him. He doesn’t know how to say goodbye. He doesn't know how to live with this.
He’s not ready. He’ll never be ready.
Then—he feels it.
A hand. Not yours. On his back.
Then another. A body presses in from behind. Then one at his side. Then another. Until the world around him disappears. He doesn’t need to look to know it’s the others closing in, forming a wall around them. A shield. A goodbye.
And something about that breaks him even further. Because he was supposed to protect them. He was supposed to keep you safe.
But he couldn’t even stop this.
So he holds you like a dying man holds a lifeline. Arms locked around you, one hand gripping the nape of your neck, the other wrapped so tightly around your shoulders it must hurt. But you don’t complain. You don’t flinch.
You sink into him.
And that’s what undoes him.
He feels it when you press your cheek to his collarbone, the wet heat of your tears seeping through the fabric of his shirt. He feels the way your body finally gives in to the grief. Not quietly. Not gently. But all at once. Like a dam breaking. Like everything you’ve been holding in—every fear, every sorrow, every buried hope—has chosen now to bleed out.
The first sob wrecks him.
It shatters through his chest like a shockwave, a sound so raw, so guttural, it forces the air from his lungs. And then another. And another. Until you’re sobbing in his arms, uncontrollably, violently, like grief is trying to tear its way out of you.
And still—he doesn’t let go.
Because if this is the last time he gets to hold you, to have you, then he’s going to memorise it. Every trembling breath. Every broken cry. Every heartbeat that still syncs with his. He’s going to carve it into his skin so he’ll never forget what it felt like to love someone so much it made him stupid. So much it made him human.
When you finally start to pull away, when your body begins to shift, the movement feels like a knife. Like losing you in slow motion.
His hand—without thinking—clutches yours, refusing to let it go, even as your breath steadies, even as your sobs die down into a choked stillness. His fingers are shaking. His eyes are burning. But he doesn’t loosen his grip.
And then—then you say the worst thing you possibly could.
“I need to go.”
The moment the words leave your lips, something in him fractures.
It’s not the first time you’ve challenged him, not the first time you’ve spoken with that stubborn fire in your voice—but this? This feels different. The way your tone doesn’t shake. The way your eyes hold his like they’ve already said goodbye.
Jungwon reacts before he can think. “No.”
It’s sharp. A command. A wall. One final barricade against the inevitable.
But you’re already scaling it. With every word, every breath, every look—you’re slipping from his grasp.
“I’m no help up here,” you say, and his gut twists. Your voice is too steady. Too rational. Like you’ve already buried the part of yourself that’s scared. Like this is already decided. “In fact, I’d be a threat. A is still out there. If I don’t find him, he’ll come back. He’ll keep coming back.”
“No.” His hand tightens around your wrist. It’s reflexive. Desperate. His fingers dig in like they can stop time, like pressure alone will keep you tethered. But it’s not enough. You’re still slipping. Slipping like water through cracked palms.
“We can still win, we can—”
“I’ve already lost, Y/N.”
The words escape before he realises he’s said them. And the second they’re out there, hanging in the silence between you, he wants to take them back. Because the look in your eyes—god—it hurts.
You freeze. Just for a second.
But your conviction doesn’t falter. He sees it in your gaze. You’ve already accepted what he can’t even begin to fathom.
“Please, Jungwon.” You step closer, and the distance that’s been widening all night folds in for one fragile moment. “I need to know that you’re safe. Only then can I die in peace.”
He sways.
He physically sways like the ground’s shifted beneath him. Because that word—die—cuts through him cleaner than any bullet. Any blade. It’s the word that makes it real.
His head shakes before he can stop it, violently, like he can shake the thought loose from reality. His grip tightens around your wrist, trembling now, trembling so hard it’s like his body already knows what his mind refuses to accept.
His gaze drops. He can’t look at you. Not when he knows this is the last time you’ll be standing here, this whole. This you.
So when your hands rise to cup his face, when your fingers brush his skin—warm, gentle, grounding—his hands instinctively come up to hold your wrists, to keep you there, to anchor you.
And that’s when the panic really sets in.
Because your expression… it’s not defiance. Not anger. Not even sorrow.
It’s peace.
That kind of terrifying, heartbreaking calm only people ready to die wear like a second skin.
Your thumb grazes his cheek, and it’s so tender it nearly kills him. He wants to scream. Wants to tell you to stop, to fight. Wants to kiss you
You beat him to it.
Your lips press against his, gentle and slow, and it feels like everything in him collapses all at once. It’s a kiss of desperation. It’s grief. It’s love. It’s a goodbye carved into the shape of your lips. Because you’re kissing him like this is the last thing you’ll give him before you walk away. He kisses you back like he’s trying to memorise it. Like he can pull you back from the brink with nothing but the way he feels about you.
You lean your forehead against his, and the moment is still. Timeless.
Then, you step away.
He’s still chasing your warmth when he realises what’s happening. The second your gaze shifts to Jay, Jungwon’s body moves on instinct. His hands reach out, wild with panic.
Too late.
Jay and Heeseung seize his arms just as he lunges, and the world erupts into chaos. He’s thrashing. Screaming. Cursing at both of them, calling out your name over and over like maybe you’ll turn around. Like maybe if he says it enough, you’ll change your mind.
But you don’t.
You walk away.
And he breaks.
He breaks.
Not like before. Not like the quiet grief he’s used to carrying.
This is raw. Ugly. Loud.
He screams until his throat burns, fights against the hands holding him down, eyes locked on the back of your figure as you move further and further away. And the terror—god, the terror—it’s not just about losing you.
It’s the helplessness.
It’s knowing that he’s still alive, still breathing, while you march straight toward death with his name still warm on your lips.
It’s knowing he can’t stop you.
When you're gone—masked and determined—Jungwon falls to his knees. Not because he’s weak. But because you took the best part of him with you.
And now he’s just a boy again.
Not a leader. Not a survivor. Just someone watching the person he loves choose to die so that he can live.
And god help him—
He would’ve switched places with you in a heartbeat.
A few minutes after you disappear into the horde, Jungwon collapses.
His legs give out beneath him like they were only held up by the ghost of your presence, and now that you're gone, there’s nothing left to keep him upright. He drops hard, first to his knees, then to the cold, unforgiving concrete of the rooftop. And he stays there. Hands pressed flat against the ground like he’s trying to anchor himself to something—anything—that won’t slip through his fingers the way you did.
But it is slipping.
You are.
And no matter how hard he digs his nails into the rooftop, how tightly he curls his fists into the grit and grime beneath him, it won’t stop the splintering sensation inside his chest—like his ribs are cracking open from the inside out.
His whole body is trembling now—violent, uncontrollable tremors racking through him. The adrenaline that had pushed him this far is gone, drained in an instant, leaving only the bone-deep exhaustion, the helplessness, the guilt. His breaths come in short, uneven gasps, like he’s forgotten how to inhale properly, and when he finally speaks, his voice is a rasp—barely audible, a ghost of sound that drifts between them like ash.
“Somebody should’ve stopped her.”
No one answers.
Because they all know they couldn’t have.
Sunoo is crouched against the wall, knees hugged tightly to his chest, face buried so deeply that his shoulders are the only thing giving him away—trembling, silent sobs rattling through him. Even Jay, who almost never breaks, has to turn his face to the side, his jaw clenched so tight it’s a wonder he hasn’t cracked a tooth. His hand covers his mouth like he’s trying to swallow down every raw emotion threatening to spill out. His eyes are red-rimmed, glassy. And he doesn’t even try to pretend he’s okay.
Jungwon doesn’t lift his head. He doesn’t need to.
He feels it in the silence—the grief sitting on all of them like an anvil, the unspeakable weight of watching you walk off with death marked into your skin and no one able to stop you.
“Fuck,” Sunghoon mutters from the edge, staring out at the horde below. His voice is hollow. “What do we do now?”
For a moment, no one speaks. But instinctively, they all turn to Jungwon.
Even though they know.
Even though they see the way he’s curled in on himself, eyes fixed on a crack in the concrete, like if he stares hard enough, it’ll crack all the way open and swallow him whole. He doesn’t speak. Not right away. Not until he finally forces out three words—empty and trembling.
“I don’t know.”
The silence that follows is brutal.
It eats at the edges of them like rot, and Jungwon wonders—quietly, bitterly—if this was all worth it. If he had just gone with you when you asked. If he’d just agreed to leave. If he hadn’t pulled you back into this place—into this war, this hope, this delusion—would you still be whole right now? Would you still be his?
And he sees it—etched into the others’ faces. That same regret. That same guilt. Especially Ni-ki.
Ni-ki, who had fought you the hardest. Who yelled at you, argued, doubted your intentions. And now you’re the one out there, bleeding, hunted, dying—for a place you never wanted to stay in to begin with.
And just when the silence feels like it’s going to smother them all—
A sound cuts through it.
A muffled giggle.
They all turn at once.
Lieutenant Kim.
She’s still tied to the base of the convenience store sign, her arms bound behind her, the gag damp in her mouth. But her eyes are bright with amusement, glinting in the moonlight like a blade. She’s smiling.
Ni-ki is the first to move, fury snapping through his limbs as he storms over to her and rips the gag from her mouth.
Lieutenant Kim exhales with exaggerated relief, then sighs dramatically, like this is all beneath her.
“Oh, you’re all so fucking pathetic,” she sneers. “Really. I almost feel bad watching this.”
Her words ripple through the rooftop like a slap. Sunoo doesn’t even look up from where he’s curled in on himself, but his voice trembles with exhausted frustration.
“Ni-ki, shut her up before I throw her off this roof.”
“Oh?” Her smile is twisted. “Even if I can tell you how to save your precious Y/N?”
Everything stops.
“What?” Jungwon’s head jerks up so fast his neck nearly snaps. The crack of his voice sounds like disbelief, but his heart’s already lurching.
Lieutenant Kim doesn’t look at him right away. She’s toying with them—slowly rotating her shoulders, rolling her neck, tasting the sudden shift in power. It’s a game to her.
“I said,” she drawls, as if repeating herself for children, “I know how you can save her.”
“You’re lying,” Jay snaps immediately, his arms folded tight across his chest, his expression cold and controlled—but his eyes flicker.
“I don’t know,” She says, that smug tone curling at the edge of her words. “Am I?” She turns her gaze sharply to Jake. “What do you think, Doctor Sim?”
Jake narrows his eyes, brows furrowed. “How can we save her?”
Lieutenant Kim shrugs like it’s the easiest thing in the world. “I’ll tell you. But only if you let me go.”
Sunghoon scoffs, stepping forward. “We’re not risking that. You could be lying. Stalling. Feeding us bullshit to get free.”
“I’m telling you,” she says sharply, her smile gone now. “You still can save her. But the longer you hesitate, the less time you have. Tick-tock, soldiers.”
“You expect us to believe you?” Sunoo bites out. “She could be dying while you play us like this.”
“And what if I’m not lying?” she continues, locking eyes with Jungwon now. “What if I’m the only one who knows how to stop this?”
Before Sunoo can argue again, Jungwon’s voice slices through the chaos.
“Okay. Deal.”
The word lands like a grenade.
Everyone turns to him.
Sunoo’s mouth opens in protest, but the look on Jungwon’s face silences him before a single syllable can form. Jungwon’s voice is steady. Flat. Unrelenting.
“I give you my word,” he says, his eyes locked on Lieutenant Kim. “You tell us how to save Y/N… and I’ll let you go.”
The wind rustles across the rooftop. Somewhere in the distance, a low groan rises from the ground. The world holds its breath.
Lieutenant Kim tilts her head slowly. She stares at him like she’s trying to read something behind his eyes, something buried deep beneath the mask he wears so well.
“Shame,” she says at last, her smirk returning. “You would’ve made an excellent leader in The Future, Sergeant Yang.”
Jungwon doesn’t blink. Doesn’t flinch. His fists are clenched tight at his sides.
Lieutenant Kim nods once. “Alright then. I’ll take your word for it.”
She turns to Jake. “You remember the day I came into the treatment facility?” Her tone is casual now, like they’re catching up after a long absence.
Jake nods slowly. “You’d lost your arm. Said you were ambushed.”
She smiles. “I was. By a biter. So I cut it off.” She lifts what remains of her limb as if presenting a trophy.
“You’re saying…,” Jake murmurs, the horror dawning across his features, “You amputated. And it stopped the infection?”
“Exactly.”
“That’s insane,” Heeseung mutters, but even he doesn’t sound convinced anymore. Just shaken.
“How do we know you’re not lying out of your ass right now?” Sunoo snaps. “If we cut it off and she dies—”
“She’s dying anyway,” Jay says quietly. His hands are clenched into fists at his sides. “She’s already been bitten. What else do we have to lose?”
No one breathes. The rooftop is still.
And Jungwon?
Jungwon’s heart is thundering in his chest. Because this is it. This is the thread. This is the one, impossibly thin thread he didn’t know he was praying for.
And he’s going to grab it with both hands.
Even if it means destroying what’s left of you to keep you alive.
Part 7
Day Zero
The first few hours after you pass out are chaos.
Jungwon doesn’t remember who screamed first. It might’ve been him. He doesn’t remember how they amputated your arm, how Jake’s hands moved with frantic precision, or how Heeseung kept barking orders that no one listened to. He doesn’t even remember when you fell asleep on his shoulders as he sang that lullaby to you.
What he does remember is the first sound you make. It didn’t even register as human. He remembers it tearing through the air, through Jungwon, like something primal and raw and wrong. The way your body arches, every muscle seizing, and your scream rips through him like glass dragged across his ribs.
He also remembers the pained look on your face as Heeseung holds you down, whispering, repeating something over and over—but Jungwon can’t hear it. Even when he wants to look away. Even when his instincts scream at him to close his eyes, to shut it out, to protect himself from the sight of you in so much pain—he doesn’t.
Because this is the cost. Your cost. And if you’re going to bear it, then so is he.
He remembers murmuring your name, again and again, not even sure if you can hear it. His voice is hoarse, breaking under the weight of every syllable. “I’ve got you. You’re okay. You’re okay. Stay with me.”
But you’re not okay.
And he’s not sure you’re going to stay.
He also remembers the blood. How warm it was, even as it soaked through your shirt. The way it clung to his fingers long after Jake had said, “It’s done.” Long after Sunghoon pressed the iron down and your body stopped seizing. Long after your eyes rolled back and the world went quiet.
He sits beside you through the night, not moving. Not speaking. Not breathing, it feels like.
When the others finally drift into uneasy sleep—some out of exhaustion, some out of fear—he stays.
Your hand is limp in his. Cold.
You should’ve come back different. That’s what he keeps telling himself. You were bit. It was over. That’s what the world said. That’s what they all said. But you didn’t turn. You didn’t die either.
You just... slipped into silence.
He also remembers overhearing the moment you appointed Jay as your executioner. He hadn’t mean to eavesdrop but its hard not to tune you out when all he wants to hear is your voice. He had to take a moment to recollect himself but the thought only twists the knife deeper.
You’re the one dying, and you’re still trying to protect him from the fallout. From having to be the one to end it all.
He feels nauseous.
By the time he makes it back into the room, his throat is raw from holding in everything that wants to shatter him that it hurts to even swallow. And when you look at him, softened eyes unaware of what he’s heard, he says nothing.
He just walks to your side, careful not to let the shaking in his arms show as he drapes the blanket over you. He tucks the edges beneath your body, fingers lingering near your shoulder, pretending nothing has changed.
But it has.
Jay lingers around a few feet away, fingers curled around the handle of a pistol. Jungwon knows why. He doesn’t ask. He doesn’t need to. He's simply upholding the promise he made to you.
Day One
He still hasn’t slept.
Your fever is rising now, sweat slicking your skin, your body shaking beneath the blankets. Jake does what he can—sponging your forehead, checking your pulse, redressing the stump—but Jungwon doesn’t leave your side. He stares. Watches your chest rise and fall, rise and fall, like if he looks away even once, you’ll stop.
When Jake tries to get him to eat something, Jungwon doesn’t respond. Not really. Just a blank stare. A nod that never leads to a bite.
Heeseung tells him gently, “She’s going to need you when she wakes up. You need your strength.”
But in his head, Jungwon hears: And if she doesn’t wake up, what’s the point?
Day Two
Heeseung sighs as he speak, “We can’t hide out in here forever. I’m sure the horde has thinned out a little, I’ll go see if I can lure them away.”
“No, I’ll go. Watch after Y/N for me, please.” Jungwon adjusts your blanket as he says.
“What? But you haven’t had proper sleep in days.”
Jungwon doesn’t argue. He just nods, gets up, grabs his rifle, put on the mask and leaves.
The first scream he lets out doesn't sound like his own. It tears out of his throat like grief incarnate, drawing the horde’s attention instantly. All of them. Their heads snap in his direction like puppets on strings, drawn by the sound of something alive—something grieving.
Jungwon bangs his rifle against the edge of the barricade, the metallic clang echoing into the night. Then again. Then again. He can barely hear it over the pounding in his chest.
“Come on,” he shouts. “Come on. You want something to eat?”
Another scream, more hoarse this time.
The first ones break away from the rest stop like waves caught in a new current. Their groans rise, louder now, a chorus of hunger, and as they move toward him, the others follow. Mindless. Predictable.
He keeps shouting until his throat burns. Until the only thing left is breath and bitterness.
Then he runs.
And they follow.
The sun is just starting to rise by the time he reaches the bus terminal, and his legs are already threatening to give out. He keeps going. He doesn’t look back.
He can hear them behind him. Always. Just far enough to not be on top of him, close enough that he can’t afford to slow down.
There’s blood on his tongue from how hard he’s been biting the inside of his cheek, and he swallows it down like medicine. He doesn’t stop. He can’t. He sees you every time he blinks—your arm, your face, the sound of your voice when you said “do it before I change my mind.”
He doesn’t know what kind of strength it takes to say that. But whatever it is, he clings to it now.
He screams again. Bangs his fist on a rusted signpost. Shoots a round into the air just to make sure they’re still coming.
They are.
The rain begins somewhere near midnight.
It’s cold, sharp, soaking through his clothes, turning the mud beneath his boots into sludge. His muscles scream. His head is pounding. He hasn’t eaten. Hasn’t drank anything. He left without telling anyone where he was going, didn’t even give them time to argue.
He had to go. If he stayed, he would’ve lost his mind.
The horde is quieter now, more sluggish with the rain. They still follow. Not because they understand. Just because it’s what they do. And maybe that’s what scares him more than anything—the simplicity of it.
No purpose. No will. Just motion.
He wonders if that’s what he’s becoming.
Day Three
He passes the village again around noon.
It’s quiet, but not empty.
He spots them first by smell, the rotting air thick with the coppery stench of death. Then he sees them—the two men he left behind. Or what’s left of them.
One has no face. Just torn muscle and glistening bone. The other’s stomach is splayed open like a dissected frog, intestines dragging behind him as he staggers forward without aim, without destination. Their eyes are grey now. Vacant.
Jungwon stops walking. Just for a second. Just long enough for a thought to cut him open: They were people. And we left them behind.
Then he shoots them both. One shot each.
He doesn’t flinch when their bodies hit the ground. Just reloads, turns his back, and keeps walking.
He wonders if that makes him human—or something else entirely.
That night, he finally sees the city.
Just beyond the rise of the hill, it sprawls in fractured silhouettes—buildings collapsed on their sides, smoke rising from craters in the road, the wind rattling broken windows like teeth chattering in a dying skull.
He slumps against the shell of a vending machine, hands shaking.
His feet are blistered. His ribs ache. His jacket is soaked through. His fingers are numb and raw, his voice long since gone.
But he made it.
They’re following him still—thinned out, some lost to the terrain, others distracted by noises that only exists in the city—but enough of them came. Enough of them are far, far away from the rest stop now.
From you.
Jungwon drags himself into the first store he sees, the door already broken in. He barricades what he can. Collapses behind a counter. Pulls the hood of his jacket low.
And for the first time in two days—he cries.
Not loud. Not even with tears.
Just silent shaking, his fingers curled in his hair, his chest folding in like he’s trying to disappear into himself.
He doesn’t sleep.
He just lies there, listening to the moans outside, wondering if you’re still alive.
Day Four
The next morning arrives cloaked in a brittle stillness. The rain that had dogged him for hours has finally stopped, but it’s left behind a colder, meaner kind of silence.
The wind has sharpened with the chill of dawn, slicing through the fabric of Jungwon’s soaked jacket, biting at his skin as if trying to remind him that he’s still alive. Every step he takes feels heavier now—sluggish and deliberate, like his body is finally starting to reckon with what he’s just done. With what it cost.
He glances out at the street, eyes scanning the remnants of the chaos he’d lured away. The horde is dispersing now, their ranks thinned and wandering, scattered like leaves caught in the aftermath of a storm.
His job is done.
But he doesn’t feel victorious. Not even close.
There’s no sense of relief settling into his chest, no triumph pounding in his veins. Just an ache. A dull, echoing emptiness that stretches from his ribs to the soles of his blistered feet.
He should feel proud—he pulled them away, bought them time, gave you a chance—but all he feels is this gaping hollow where something inside him used to live.
So he turns.
And begins the slow, punishing walk back to the rest stop. Back to you.
Not because he knows you’re awake. Not because there’s been any sign, any whisper of hope that you’ve stirred. But because he has to. Because something in his chest—something feral and aching and stubborn—needs to be near you again, even if it’s only to sit beside your motionless body and count your breaths.
Even if you’re no longer breathing at all.
Halfway back, while dragging himself along the road with boots caked in mud and legs that barely hold him upright, he stumbles across a curb overgrown with weeds and cracked cement. And there—sprouting defiantly between the rubble and ruin—is a small patch of wildflowers.
Delicate. Bright. Alive.
They sway in the breeze like they’ve never known the end of the world. As if they exist in a time untouched by rot and ash. And Jungwon doesn’t know what kind they are—hasn’t the faintest clue. He doesn’t even care.
He sees them and thinks of you.
You, curled beneath a threadbare blanket, your forehead damp with fever. You, whispering your final requests with the last of your strength. You, promising you'd be okay—just to spare him.
His breath catches in his throat, and then—
He runs.
Doesn’t think. Doesn’t hesitate. He sprints like a man chasing salvation, like a single second might make all the difference between reaching you in time and arriving too late.
His feet pound against the pavement, raw and ragged. He slips once—knees colliding with the ground, palms tearing open on shattered glass. Blood seeps from his hands, but he doesn't stop. He can’t. He presses on, stumbling to his feet with a ragged gasp and pushes forward again, faster, harder, propelled by something that isn’t logic or certainty but need.
Because he doesn’t know if you’re still breathing.
Doesn’t know if the others were able to hold the infection at bay, if the amputation worked, if the fever broke.
He doesn’t know anything.
But he needs to.
Because if you are awake—if you’re still there—if your eyes are open and searching for something to hold onto in this world—then he wants to be the one you see. Wants you to remind him that it’s not too late to hold on to what’s left.
Not hope.
Not some dream of a better world.
Just you.
Because in a world where everything is dying, where everything good slips away too fast—you are the only thing he can still believe in.
Day Five
You still haven’t woken.
The others take turns watching you now. Heeseung insists on it, says Jungwon needs to get some air. He does but only so he could hunt down the remainder of A’s people.
He doesn’t tell them that he’s not hunting them for safety. That he’s hunting them because it’s the only thing that makes the noise in his head stop.
He stalks the woods in silence, teeth clenched, gun steady. Every bullet he fires feels like penance. Every body that hits the ground is a fraction of the rage and helplessness he can’t bleed out any other way.
By the time he returns, you haven’t moved. And he hates that the sight of your motionless figure still makes him hope.
Day Eight
He starts blaming himself.
Not just for this. For everything. For dragging you back to the camp when you wanted to leave. For believing he could protect anyone. For every command that got someone hurt. For letting you go that night, when you said you were bit.
You had looked him in the eye and told him. And what had he done?
Screamed. Panicked. Held you like you were already slipping through his fingers. You had to be the one to make the plan. To tell them what to do. To walk away. And he let you.
He let you.
Day Eleven
He wakes up from a dream where you died.
Your body had gone cold. Your eyes clouded. But worse—your voice, the one he’d memorised in every tone, every laugh, every biting remark—it was gone. Forever.
He screams himself awake.
Jake and Sunghoon find him on the edge of the rooftop, heaving, fists clenched in his hair, shoulders shaking. He doesn’t say anything. Just stares down at the world and tries to remember how to breathe.
Day Twelve
He’s still out there, combing the surrounding woods for any trace of A’s remaining people.
Deep down, he knows there probably aren’t any left—not this close to the rest stop. But that doesn’t stop him. He keeps going, driven not by strategy or necessity, but by something far more relentless: the need to do something.
To bleed out the guilt he can’t seem to quiet.
Day Fourteen
You move.
Just your fingers. A twitch. Barely there.
He’s the only one who sees it.
He grabs your hand and nearly crushes it in his grip, whispering your name like a prayer, like a drowning man breaking the surface. But you don’t stir again. And when he tells the others, they think he’s imagining it.
He doesn’t care.
He knows what he saw.
Day Fifteen
The second Jungwon steps past the barricade, he knows something’s changed.
He can’t explain it—there’s no sound, no shout, no rushing footsteps to greet him. Just the stillness of the evening air, the muted creak of the gate behind him, and the way the hairs on the back of his neck stand on end like some part of him already knows.
He moves automatically, his legs dragging with exhaustion, muscles screaming from days without rest. The rifle slung over his shoulder feels heavier than ever, the dried blood on his sleeves long since stiffened into the fabric. Every step toward the convenience store feels like wading through wet cement, but he keeps going. Because you’re here. Or you were. And that’s all that matters.
Heeseung meets him at the threshold, eyes wide, mouth opening like he’s about to say something—but Jungwon doesn’t stop.
Not until he sees you.
You're standing up. Just barely. But it’s enough to make his heart lurch so violently in his chest that it knocks the breath clean out of him.
You're awake.
You're alive.
His legs buckle.
He doesn’t remember crossing the room. Doesn’t remember letting the rifle slide from his shoulder or the way the others instinctively moved aside for him like they knew—they knew—he wouldn’t be able to wait a second longer.
And then you look at him.
Eyes tired, swollen, half-lidded from pain and medication, but unmistakably you.
“Y/N.”
Your name breaks in his mouth—raw and jagged, torn from somewhere deep in his chest.
He buries his face in the crook of your neck, and the second his skin touches yours, he shatters.
His entire body trembles, the sobs clawing their way up his throat with a force that leaves him breathless. He feels your warmth, your breath, the faint thump of your pulse against his temple—and it’s too much. Too much relief. Too much grief. Too much of everything he’s been holding back.
And when he feels your hand on his back, pressing into him, returning the embrace, it splits him wide open.
“You’re okay,” he breathes, over and over, like if he says it enough, he can make it true. “You’re awake. God, I thought—” His voice breaks, catching on the words he’s too afraid to finish. “I thought I lost you.”
Your voice is quiet, trembling. “I’m here. I’m okay.”
He pulls back, just enough to see your face—drawn, pale, bruised, but alive. Alive. His thumb brushes along your jaw, reverent and aching, and it feels like holding something sacred. He can barely believe it.
“I’m sorry,” he chokes out, voice thick with guilt. “I should’ve been here. I should’ve—”
“No,” you whisper, shaking your head. “You kept them safe. You kept me safe.”
The words don’t make it easier. They just hurt differently. He leans in again, forehead pressed to yours, his breath stuttering as his hands find your waist, gripping like you might fade if he loosens his hold.
“I thought I lost you forever,” he whispers, and this time, the weight of it nearly brings him down again.
And then—then you say it.
“I’m alive.”
Your voice cracks on the words, but they echo like a miracle.
His chest seizes. His breath stalls. “You’re alive.” It slips from his lips like a confession, like an answer to a prayer he didn’t know he was allowed to make. “God, Y/N… you’re alive.”
He lets out a shaky laugh, the sound caught somewhere between disbelief and something dangerously close to a sob. He buries his face in the crook of your neck, and you feel the heat of his tears before they even fall.
He’s crying.
Openly. Unashamedly. His body trembling against yours, breath hitching with every inhale, fingers clutching at your shirt like it’s the only thing tethering him to this moment. He’s held it in for days—for weeks—and now, with you finally awake, it all comes spilling out.
His arms tighten around you, as if trying to pull you further into him, trying to convince himself that this is real—that this isn’t a dream or some hallucination brought on by sleep deprivation and guilt.
And then you kiss him.
Or maybe he kisses you. He doesn’t know who moves first. All he knows is the way your lips find his like they’ve done it a thousand times before. It's desperate, clumsy, shaking with emotion, but he pours everything into it—every sleepless night, every scream he swallowed, every prayer he never voiced.
When you whisper his name, it doesn’t sound like pain anymore. It sounds like salvation.
“I’m here,” he whispers back, lips brushing yours, his voice trembling with the weight of a thousand promises. “I’m here. I’m not leaving you.”
He feels you collapse against him, your face tucked into the curve of his neck, and the sound of your breathing against his skin grounds him in a way nothing else can. He holds you tighter. Closer.
You’re real.
Somehow. Against every odd, through every horror. You came back.
And now, finally, so does he.
He doesn’t let go of you that night.
Not when the others start filtering in, trying not to stare. Not when Jake quietly checks your vitals and nods in quiet relief. Not even when Sunoo tries to pass him a damp cloth and tells him to “breathe or something.”
He stays curled beside you on that mattress, head tucked near your shoulder, his arms wrapped protectively around you like you’ll vanish if he lets go.
Because for two weeks, he lived in the space between grief and hope.
And tonight—for the first time in what feels like forever—he gets to choose hope.
Because you're here.
You're alive.
And he never wants to know a world without you again.
part 7 - hope | masterlist
♡。·˚˚· ·˚˚·。♡
notes from nat: okay NOW i conclude safe & sound... see this is what happens when a writer has major attachment issues. it gives you 18k words on a word document after a series supposedly ended. anyway happy jay day! and I'll come back with many exciting things soon! xoxo
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taglist open. 1/3 @sungbyhoon @theothernads @kyshhhhhh @jiryunn @strxwbloody @jaklvbub @rikikiynikilcykiki @jakesimfromstatefarm @rikiiisoob
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@cheers-to-you-th
types of kissers on svt.
seungcheol: tongue kisser
this dude is slipping his tongue into your mouth the moment he has the chance. don't get me wrong, if he can't kiss you properly he will set for pecks, even just soft kisses using those plump lips - but if we're talking actually kissing, then he wants to taste you and have you sighing. one hand on your hips, the other one on the back of your head.
jeonghan: smooth kisser
jeonghan is sooo smooth when it comes to kissing. you might not even notice him sliding his tongue into your mouth - either because he's also caressing your arm or sliding his hands to your waist -, but once you do and you sigh, jeonghan makes sure to smile against your lips as he leads the kiss in his own way (because you better believe he's doing this his way).
joshua: the smiler
he's happy to be there, kissing you. he's happy to be able to feel you on his lips, taste lingering on it for hours afterwards, hands moving all around your body. he's so happy that, when he's out of breath, joshua takes his time to smile on your lips, to show you how his serotonin levels are way up now (even though sometimes his eyes are saying "i'm gonna ruin you").
junhui: free kisser
his kisses are always gentle, as if he's waiting for you to show him how you want it. will gladly move his lips, put some tongue into you and even some teeth, but you gotta start it. he just loves kissing so much, it doesn't really matter how it goes to him so you have a free card to ask for whatever you want.
soonyoung: nasty kisser
let me get this straight: the nastier, sloppier and wetter, the better. soonyoung likes to hear you kissing him, the sounds your lips make, the sound his tongue caressing yours make. he isn't scared to get saliva all over his chin, so don't even bother stopping him - he's only stopping when neither you or him can breath.
wonwoo: slow kisser
it's not even planned, it's just default by now - he somehow always grab your face with both his hands, holding you in place as his lips open yours to welcome his shy tongue. it's slow most of the times, it's a bit clumsy - when he doesn't take his glasses off -, but it's so full of love. most likely to whisper a 'come here' before kissing you.
jihoon: the intense kisser
this motherfucker treats every kiss as if you're about to disappear. a hand on your face, the other one roaming your body, as he expects you to do the same. grabs your hair and pulls your closer, let's you take control over the kiss and how much movement you want, but keeping you close it's his job. groans and moans against your mouth, especially if you use your tongue on him.
dokyeom: the toucher
can't kiss without touching you. "oh, but it's just a peck on the lips-" yeah, and he's gonna grab you by the neck while you do it. romantic, slow kiss in the middle of his kitchen? his arms are circling your body. make out session on your couch? his hands are grabbing your thighs and/or hips. a shy kiss in the middle of the street? his hands are holding yours. for real, there's no kissing without touching with dk, ever.
mingyu: the teaser (who likes being teased)
mingyu loves to tease in anyway he can, especially if he's trying to build up something more. expect his hand around your neck, his teeth softly biting and pulling your lips, long and happy sighs against your mouth, his tongue sliding on your own - there's many, many tricks he likes to use it. please, match his freak and he will melt in your hands too (pull his hair!!).
minghao: romantic kisser
minghao believes there's only so many things that can be as romantic as kissing, so he likes to put emotion into it. there is less tongue and more lips, he stops in the middle of it to look at you and brush your hair, peck your lips and your chin. he takes his time, it's really sweet - but it can also turn you both on.
seungkwan: shy kisser
he likes kissing, don't get me wrong - but full kisses, with tongue, sounds, hair grabbing and stuff are only reserved for the bedroom. outside of it, seungkwan's kisses are shy, there's always a faint tone of red adorning his cheeks as he pecks your lips for a few seconds. might even whine if he tries to pull away but you grab his neck and make him stay there. it's cute.
vernon: soft kisser
he's slow and gentle. vernon always starts with his hand on your face, cupping your cheek as he savory the kiss. it's his way to convey all his love for you on it. might rest his hands on your hips if he's feeling like letting you control the kiss or sliding them from your face to your neck if he feels like controlling.
chan: the smirker
this motherfucker knows what he's doing when he holds your face, pulling you towards him and giving you a peck before actually kissing you, his lips controlling yours and stopping to smirk against your mouth when you try to pull him closer. he's a menace AND a good kisser, i'm sorry.

have you considered tipping me? | ko-fi 🍒
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★⋆ ┊ . ˚
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STUPID IDIOT
Pairing: Jihoon x Reader x Soonyoung
Genre: smut !MDNI!, pwp
WC: 3.3k
Warnings: Smut, threesome, oral (m & f receiving), unprotected sex (stupid idiots, don't be them), drinking alcohol, fingering, double penetration, strangers to ???, clubbing, creampie, lmk if I missed anything
Summary: You go stupid dummy in the club like an idiot (and take two cute boys home)
Tags: @syluslittlecrows
@eclipsaria my pookie, beta read and fixed me being stupid
banner by @sanaxo-o ily
First collab done \ ^o^ /
Bright lights flash around you, drink in hand as you dance with your friends, laughing and smiling. The Saturday after finals has the club going absolutely stupid, drunk college kids going crazy as they celebrate– you being part of them. You jump, arm around your best friend as you sing obnoxiously, rapping T.O.P.’s part in Fantastic Baby with passion and energy.
“I’m going to go to the bathroom” She yells in your ear. You nod, following with her because that's just how it goes. You wait as she enters the stall, taking in your disheveled appearance and drunkenly giggling, fixing your lipstick and taming your hair as much as possible. Your friend walks out, washing her hands.
As you exit the restroom, you bump into someone wearing a shirt so bright green it sobers you for a second before you shake your head, “Sorry” the two of you say at the same time. You look at the man in front of you, dark hair, full lips, sharp eyes. Damn. He’s hot. His flushed cheeks also indicate that he is very, very tipsy.
You smile at him, noticing he looks slightly nervous, and introduce yourself. He smiles back and your heart melts because what the fuck his smile is precious. “Jihoon. Some people call me Woozi though. Do you go to HYU?” You nod and he smiles again, “Me too! I’m a music major, you?” You reply with your major– pre med– finding the guy to be precious.
“WOO TO THE JI TO THE WOOZIIII!!!” A voice behind you screams. A man with even sharper eyes and blonde hair comes up from behind you and slings an arm around Jihoons shoulders, extremely drunk. “Who’s this pretty lady?” He asks, smiling up at you. That's when you knew: you were completely and utterly screwed.
Jihoon looks at him annoyed, “Fuck off.” He mutters, but the other man just smiles brighter.
“I’m Soonyoung. Or Hoshi! Nice to meet you. I’m a zoology major and you’re hot.” You snort at his outgoing nature as his face flushes red.
“Nice to meet you Soonyoung. I’m a pre-med and you’re also hot.” His face goes even redder and Jihoon huffs. “You’re hot too Jihoon.” You say with a laugh as the man in question’s ears go crimson, pink dusting his cheeks. “You guys want to dance?” You offer. That’s how you ended up dancing with the awkward–but insanely attractive– guys, surrounded by lights and music so loud you can feel the bass in your chest.
The night goes by in a haze of laughter and drinks. You learn that Soonyoung is a total flirt and a bit of a party animal, but he’s got a heart of gold. And Jihoon? He’s shy, but incredibly sweet. You find out that he’s actually the lead singer of a popular cover band on campus. The way he talks about music with such passion makes your heart flutter. You share stories of your classes and hobbies, and even though you’re in completely different worlds, you find that you actually have quite a bit in common.
As the club starts to wind down, the three of you stumble outside into the cool night air, the music still pulsing through the walls. Soonyoung leans against a lamppost, breathless from your latest dance-off. “You guys are the best wingmen a guy could ask for.” You laugh, looping your arms through theirs, feeling a strange sense of camaraderie. “So, where’s the after-party?” Hoshi asks, grinning.
Jihoon looks at you, his eyes glinting with an unspoken question. “Well, we could go to our place,” he says shyly. “Have some fun.” You raise an eyebrow but agree, feeling a rush of excitement.
The walk to their apartment feels like forever as your legs beg for mercy under the weight of your heels. But the promise of more fun keeps you going. You enter their place, which is surprisingly tidy for two college guys– although there’s some questionable tiger print furniture you learn is Soonyoungs. Soft lighting and the faint smell of incense make it feel cozy and intimate.
Soonyoung puts on some music, something upbeat but not as loud as the club, and you all sit down on the couch, sharing stories about the most embarrassing things you’ve done in class. You blush at the thought of your anatomy faux pas while Jihoon tells a story that has you both in stitches. As the night progresses, the conversation turns more personal. You learn that Soonyoung’s dream is to work with animals, specifically endangered species, and travel the world to study them. Jihoon, on the other hand, dreams of composing his own music and performing in front of thousands of people.
The atmosphere in the room shifts as Soonyoung moves closer to you, his hand finding yours. He looks into your eyes with a smolder that could melt the polar ice caps. You laugh nervously, your cheeks growing warm under his intense gaze. Meanwhile, Jihoon seems to be getting more and more nervous, his leg bouncing to the beat of the music. You realize you’ve been leaning towards Soonyoung without even noticing.
“You know, for a premed, you’ve got some killer dance moves,” Soonyoung whispers, his breath hot on your neck. You turn to face him, your eyes meeting his. His hand slides up to your elbow, his thumb brushing against your skin in a way that sends shivers down your spine. You can’t help but feel a pull towards him, his energy like a magnetic force that’s impossible to ignore.
Jihoon watches the two of you with a mix of amusement and something else—something you can’t quite put your finger on. He takes a sip of his drink, his eyes never leaving yours, and you feel a sudden jolt of electricity as your gazes lock. You blush and look away, trying to ignore the way your heart is racing. The music shifts to a slower rhythm, and Soonyoung pulls you closer, placing your hand on his chest. You can feel his heart thudding beneath your palm, in sync with the bass of the song.
He leans in, his full lips so close to yours that you can almost taste the whiskey on his breath. “You’re not just a pretty face, you know?” He murmurs, his voice low and husky. “You’re incredible, really.” You laugh, feeling the heat in your cheeks, and look back at him. “Thanks,” you reply, your voice barely above a whisper. “You’re not so bad yourself, tiger boy.”
Soonyoung’s smile widens, and before you know it, he’s leaning in for a kiss. Your heart skips a beat as your eyes flutter shut, his soft mouth pressing against yours. It’s a gentle kiss, full of promise and excitement, and you feel yourself leaning in, your body moving of its own accord. His hand moves up to cup your face, his thumb tracing the line of your jaw as the kiss deepens. Your heart is racing now, and you can’t help but get lost in the moment.
Jihoon’s gaze burns into you from the side, and you can feel his tension like a palpable force. You pull back from Soonyoung’s embrace, your eyes darting to meet his. There’s a silent conversation happening between the two of you, one that’s full of confusion and desire. You realize that maybe, just maybe, this wasn’t the best idea. But the alcohol and the music and the sheer attraction you feel for both of them has your judgment clouded. Soonyoung’s hand is still on your waist, his eyes dark with want, but there’s something about Jihoon’s gaze that makes your stomach flip-flop.
You lean over to grab your drink, your hand shaking slightly. “You guys mind if I take a breather?” You ask, trying to play it cool. They both nod, the tension in the room thick enough to cut with a knife. You head to the kitchen, taking a deep breath to compose yourself. As you lean against the counter, you hear a soft footstep behind you. You don’t need to turn around to know it’s Jihoon. He’s always been the quiet one, the one who observes before he acts.
He’s so close now you can feel the heat radiating off his body. He gently takes the drink out of your hand, setting it down. “You okay?” He asks, his voice a soft caress. You nod, turning to face him. He’s even more handsome up close, his eyes searching yours with an intensity that makes you want to confess every little secret you have. “I just... I don’t know what’s happening here,” you admit.
Jihoon nods, swallowing hard. “I know. I feel it too,” he says, his hand reaching up to cup your cheek. His touch is gentle, his thumb brushing over your skin in a way that sends a shiver down your spine. You lean into it, feeling the connection between you two growing stronger by the second. Soonyoung is still in the room, but it’s like he’s a million miles away. The only thing that matters is the way Jihoon’s eyes are looking into yours, the way his hand feels on your face.
Before you can say anything more, he leans in and kisses you. It’s different from Soonyoung’s kiss—slower, more deliberate. It’s like he’s trying to communicate something with every press of his lips, every stroke of his tongue. You melt into it, feeling your resolve to stay detached from this situation slipping away like sand through your fingers. You’re lost in the moment, lost in him.
As you kiss, Soonyoung’s presence fades into the background. He’s still there, watching with a look that’s part shock, part intrigue. You know you should stop, you know it’s not right to lead him on, but the alcohol and the chemistry between the three of you is a potent mix. And when Jihoon pulls away, you find yourself looking at him with the same want reflected in his eyes.
“Let’s go to my room,” he murmurs, and you nod, allowing him to lead you down the hallway. The music thumps through the walls, muffled by the thick layers of your desire. Inside the dimly lit space, you can barely make out the posters of musical notes and artists, a stark contrast to the passionate scene unfolding. Jihoon closes the door behind you, his hand finding yours again, and you know you’re crossing a line you might not be able to come back from.
Soonyoung has followed you both, his curiosity piqued. “Is this okay?” He asks, a hint of uncertainty in his voice. You look into his eyes, the green shirt seemingly glowing in the dark, and nod. Somehow, the three of you end up tangled on the bed, limbs intertwined as if you’ve done this a hundred times before. It’s a dance of hesitation and want, a silent agreement that you’re all in this together.
Jihoon’s shyness dissipates as the night wears on. He’s not the shy guy you met at the club anymore—he’s confident, commanding even. His hands are everywhere, exploring, claiming. Soonyoung’s touches are more playful, his kisses peppered with whispers of sweet nothings that make you giggle. You find yourself in the middle, a delicious sandwich of desire, trying to keep up with both their advances.
Clothes come off in a flurry of motion, a blur of fabric and limbs. Hands roam, lips trace, and bodies are pressed together with heat and passion. You’re not sure whose touch is whose, and you don’t care. The room is a haze of pleasure, the only thing clear is the feeling of skin on skin. You’ve never been with two guys before, and it’s overwhelming in the best way possible. You feel cherished, desired, alive in a way you never have before.
Soonyoung’s mouth finds your neck, his teeth grazing the sensitive skin there as he sucks in a breath. You gasp, arching your back as Jihoon’s hand slides down to cup your ass, pulling you closer to him. His kisses are deep, claiming, and you can’t get enough of the way he tastes—like whiskey and the sweetness of your drink. Your hands are in his hair, pulling him closer, as his other hand explores your body, teasing your nipples until they’re hard peaks.
Jihoon’s touch is gentle yet firm, his movements deliberate as he makes you squirm with pleasure. His fingers dance over your skin, leaving trails of fire in their wake. Soonyoung’s mouth moves to your ear, his breath hot against your skin as he whispers sweet nothings that make you wet. You feel his erection pressing against your thigh, and the thought of having both of them inside you sends a bolt of desire straight to your core.
You kiss Soonyoung again, your hands running down his chiseled abs. His tongue plays with yours, exploring every inch of your mouth as if he’s trying to memorize the taste of you. You can feel the anticipation building in the room, the tension tightening like a coil ready to spring. You straddle Jihoon, grinding against him as he watches you with hooded eyes, his hands on your hips, guiding your movements. Soonyoung kisses a trail down your neck, his teeth grazing your collarbone, making you shiver with pleasure.
Your bra hits the floor, and Soonyoung’s mouth finds your breast, his tongue teasing the sensitive peak. You gasp as Jihoon’s hand slides between your legs, his fingers finding your soaked panties. He teases you gently over the fabric, his eyes never leaving yours. The room spins with pleasure, your heart racing as you realize you’re about to do something you’ve never done before. Soonyoung’s hands are on your hips now, his thumbs teasing your waistline. You can feel his erection against your ass, and you lean back into him, his hands coming around to cup your breasts, his thumbs flicking your nipples in time with Jihoon’s movements.
Jihoon’s breath hitches as he watches Soonyoung touch your chest, and you can see the desire in his eyes. He leans back, his eyes never leaving yours as he takes off his shirt, revealing a chest that looks like it was sculpted by the gods. You reach out to touch him, your hand sliding over the smooth, firm planes of his torso. Soonyoung kisses down your body, his tongue tracing a line down your spine, making you arch against him.
Jihoon looks up at you, his eyes dark with lust. You can see the struggle in them, the want to devour you whole. Soonyoung’s hands slide down to your panties, pulling them down and exposing you to both of them. Jihoon’s mouth finds your core, his tongue flicking against your clit, making you moan. Soonyoung kisses you, his hands still exploring your breasts, his thumbs rolling over your nipples. The combination of their touches is exquisite, an overwhelming feeling that has you writhing on top of Jihoon. He slides two fingers inside you, and you buck against his mouth, the sensation overwhelming. You can feel your orgasm building, the tension in your body coiling tighter and tighter.
As Jihoon’s tongue swirls around your clit, Soonyoung’s hand moves down to stroke his cock, his eyes never leaving yours. The sight of him touching himself while watching you with Jihoon is almost too much to handle. You reach back, your hand finding his shaft, and you stroke him in time with Jihoon’s movements inside you. The two of them are in sync, their rhythms matching perfectly, driving you closer and closer to the edge.
You moan into Soonyoung’s mouth, your body trembling with the effort of holding back your climax. Jihoon’s fingers curl inside you, hitting that perfect spot, and you know you can’t hold on much longer. Soonyoung breaks the kiss, his eyes locked on yours as he whispers, “Come for us, baby.” And with those words, you do. Your orgasm crashes over you, a wave of pleasure that makes your vision swim and your body convulse. They both watch you with hunger, their desire for you palpable.
Soonyoung takes over, his mouth replacing Jihoon’s hand, as the latter kisses his way up your body. His cock nudges against your entrance, and you’re so wet, so ready for him, that he slides in with ease. You gasp as he fills you, his hands gripping your hips as he starts to move. It’s a slow, deliberate rhythm, one that has you panting and begging for more. Jihoon kisses your neck, his breath hot against your skin as his hand finds your clit again.
You’re sandwiched between them now, Soonyoung’s mouth worshipping your breasts while Jihoon’s cock slides in and out of you, setting a pace that’s driving you insane. Your hand finds Soonyoung’s hair, pulling him closer as he sucks harder. The sensation is almost too much, your body tightening around Jihoon as you feel another orgasm building.
Jihoon’s hand leaves your clit, moving up to play with your hair as he picks up the pace, his hips snapping up to meet yours. You can see Soonyoung’s erection, and you know he’s not going to be left out for long.
Soonyoung’s mouth pops off your chest with a lewd noise, leaving you gasping for air. He positions himself at your entrance, and with a wicked grin, he slides in next to Jihoon, filling you completely. You moan, the feeling of having both of them inside you at the same time more than you ever thought possible. They move together, their rhythm matching perfectly, creating a symphony of pleasure that echoes in the room. You can feel every inch of them, the way their bodies move in unison, the way their breaths mingle with yours.
Jihoon’s hand moves to your throat, his grip firm but gentle, as he takes control of the kiss. His other hand slides down to cup your ass, pushing you down onto his and Soonyoung’s cocks. The sensation is intense, the fullness of them both making your eyes roll back in your head. You can feel yourself getting wetter, your body begging for more. You’ve never felt so alive, so wanted, so completely consumed by desire.
Soonyoung’s thrusts become more urgent, his breathing ragged. He bites your shoulder, the sting of pain mixing with the pleasure as you rock against him. Jihoon’s eyes are hooded, his movements deliberate as he fucks you in time with Soonyoung’s. You can feel the tension in the room building, the energy between the three of you reaching a crescendo. You know you’re all going to come together, and the thought sends you spiraling even closer to the edge.
Your orgasm hits you like a freight train, your body convulsing around both of them as you scream out their names. Soonyoung’s grip on your hips tightens, and you feel him tense as he follows you over the edge, his hot release filling you up. Jihoon’s hand squeezes your ass as he fucks you through it, his own orgasm shuddering through his body. You collapse onto him, panting, as they slide out of you, leaving you feeling empty.
You’re both a tangled mess of limbs and sweat, your heart hammering in your chest. Jihoon kisses the back of your neck, his breathing still heavy. “That was...” He starts, but the words seem to fail him.
Jihoon’s arms tighten around you, his heart racing beneath your cheek. “AMAZING!” Soonyoung yells from the bathroom, where he’d stumbled off to clean up. You can’t help but laugh, the absurdity of the situation finally breaking through the haze of desire.
You sit up, feeling a bit awkward as you try to find your bearings in the mess of sheets and discarded clothing. Jihoon watches you with a soft smile, his chest rising and falling with each deep breath. “We should, uh, do this again sometime,” he whispers, his voice still a little shaky.
“I’d like that.”
Collab Admins: @sanaxo-o, @bella-feed and @dokyumms
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when you grew up as a lonely uncool girl it will never stop haunting you by the way. you will meet a cool person at a bar or the train station or at a friend's party and you can wear your most stylish outfit and striking eye makeup and you will swear that they can see through all of the facade and see the lonely terribly insecure teenage girl you used to be who desperately wanted to connect and you will swear that they know that there is like an insurmountable gap between you. this will happen forever
#idk you can fake confidence until you can't#i always struggle to remember that people generally think of me as cool. and that i look and act different than how i did at 14
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I am a dinner menu recommendation Jungwon!!!!


JUNGWON: I'm taking dinner menu recommendations~
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@cheers-to-you-th
our bunso 🥹🖤
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