Buy me a Coffee
Is he okay
Got another fan art of these two! I LOVE THEM WHEN THEYRE TOGETHER IN THE SHOW SO MUCHHHH
Gi Hun distracting everyone so he and 001 can have a moment đ¤
Gi-hun texting his boyfriend, the Squid Man
After the Games collapse and the dust settles, Junho (bless his stubborn heart) basically drags Inho back into reality. He knows their mom hasnât stopped setting out an extra bowl at dinner. Knows she still prays for the son who walked out the door and never came back. So he tells Inho itâs time. Itâs long past time.
And Inho? Heâs terrified. Like pacing-anxiously-wringing-his-hands-nearly-backing-out kind of terrified. He doesnât believe he deserves forgiveness. Doesnât believe sheâll even want to see him.
Junhoâs patient with him. Too patient, really. But he knows his brother, knows how shame can build walls thicker than steel. So he waits. Coaxes. Tells him over and over: She never stopped waiting for you.
Eventually, Inho cracks. Quietly. One afternoon, he says, âMaybe I could visit. Just once.â
Thatâs when Gihun steps in. Gentle voice. Soft hand on the shoulder. âYou donât have to do it alone.â And Inhoâwithout even thinkingâasks him to come.
So itâs the three of them standing outside her apartment door, Junho knocking once, twice. And when she opens it and sees her eldest, the step-son she thought sheâd lost, itâs like everything stills.
No yelling. No slamming doors. Just her pulling him in, sobbing into his chest. Her tiny frame wrapped around him like sheâs trying to make up for years in a single hug. Inho doesnât cry, but his eyes are glassy. Junho turns away, giving them space. Gihun just gently rests a hand on Inhoâs back. No words. Just here.
Dinner isâŚawkward at first. But his mom, bless her, keeps the conversation moving. Gently asking questions, slowly reminding Inho what it means to belong somewhere. She asks Gihun where heâs from, what he doesânever once hinting at anything beyond friendship. Just polite, motherly curiosity, doting in the way mothers do when theyâre trying to say thank you without making anyone uncomfortable.
Gihun answers easily. Inho mostly picks at his food and listens, shoulders slowly lowering with every minute. At one point, she turns to Inho with a soft smile.
âSo⌠how did you and Gihun meet?â
And he freezes. He feels Gihun glance at him, but doesnât look back. The truth is a minefield, too fragile and too brutal to speak aloud.
So he lies. âJunho introduced us. A while back.â
Thereâs a tiny pause. Gihun doesnât say anything. Neither does Junho. His mother smiles like she believes him. Maybe she does. Maybe she doesnât. But she doesnât press. She just nods, and keeps talking, filling the space for him.
(She also calls Gihun âhandsomeâ at one point. Inho definitely chokes on his rice.)
Later, when she offers to let them stay the night, Inho starts to declineâbut she insists. âItâs just one night. Itâs late. Youâll be more comfortable here.â Inho starts to protest, voice strainedâbut Gihun nudges him gently with a look that says itâs okay. So Inho nods.
She disappears down the hall to set something up. They sit in the dim room, Gihunâs knee brushing his, Junho already half-asleep on the floor like itâs ten years ago and nothing ever changed. When she returns, she just says, âThere you go,â nods toward the spare room, and excuses herself to bed. No fanfare.
She disappears before they can thank her.
Inho hesitates before standing. Thereâs that gnawing in his chest again. Heâs already preparing himself for two bedrolls. For separation. For unspoken lines drawn in thin blankets.
But when they walk inâ
Thereâs only one bedroll on the floor. Blankets, pillows, neat and shared like itâs the most normal thing in the world.
Inho stares. Gihun stares. Neither of them moves.
No assumptions. No jokes. Just this quiet, deliberate gesture wrapped in soft flannel. A thousand words unsaidâbut understood.
Inho crouches down slowly, brushing his hand over the blanket. âShe knew,â he says, barely above a whisper. âShe didnât say anything, but⌠she knew.â
Gihun kneels beside him. âYeah.â
And Inho finally lets his head drop, shoulders caving, some deep ache inside him spilling out in a quiet, trembling breath.
They lie side by side that night in silence, facing the ceiling, fingers brushing.
Home isnât loud. Itâs not a welcome parade.
Itâs one bedroll on a wooden floor, and a mother who sees everything.
release their bathroom scene
top seong gi-hun and bottom hwang in-ho firm believer until the day I die idgaf
đ
pointing a gun in the face of a man who is only here because of the plans he's made, accompanied by the lurking presence of his right hand man watching over his shoulder