Tumgik
#yu ijin
nyashykyunnie · 5 months
Text
What do they have in common?
Psycopath big brothers who will fuck you up
Tumblr media Tumblr media
For their cute and pretty baby sisters
Tumblr media Tumblr media
565 notes · View notes
mistleria · 6 months
Text
Stimming isn't enough I need to gnaw on their arm
192 notes · View notes
manawari · 10 months
Text
When you think they are normal students, but they are not.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
399 notes · View notes
iamumbra195 · 4 months
Text
Oh my god, 018 was a little sweetheart. He already gave me the vibe that he was a kind person, him and 008 both. But given all the flashbacks we've had of ppl trying to steal Ijin's food, someone giving him food in order to help him when they likely weren't given much probably stuck with him for so long
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Also, he's adorable. I love his hair so much
99 notes · View notes
saltyreina · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Tumblr media
139 notes · View notes
iwillfightformydream · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
I am convinced that people in Dushik cha ‘s gang must think Ijin is his little brother or something.Or a little crazy kid Dushik illegally adopted.
146 notes · View notes
skeletonqueen06 · 11 months
Text
Headcanon where Yu Dayun is adored by the numbers. Since she's Ijin's sister, they took it upon themselves to care for her like she's their sister too. That cause Ijin to keep giving the boys (especially 032) the death stares when he thinks the boys are getting too chummy with his beloved sister. Oh and of course, they love Ijin's grandpa to death because there's no elder ever give them genuine care like Ijin's grandpa do.
154 notes · View notes
tysleria · 6 months
Text
When they have the most pretty eyes <3
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
93 notes · View notes
yoyoyo-idk · 5 months
Text
ijin giving his friends and family food so they don't have to fight for it (he never wants them to fight. ever) and also because in his memories, giving people food makes them like you :). you give me a chocolate bar, i tear the throat of your enemies out, yeah?
66 notes · View notes
eatsbop · 7 months
Text
It's kind of cute how Ijin would take some information at face value.
I hate to think that it's all due to the training they went through. That it probably made it instinctual for him to follow orders without question. I'd rather think that Ijin, despite everything, still had confidence in people's innate humanity and did not zombie barricade himself from the whole world. That this poor kid's heart never wavered and remained unjaded. How his constant reception is give people a chance rather than be outrightly prejudiced against them. I mean perhaps that's partly what made him 001. He handles each person/situation individually and is never inclined to make unfounded assumptions.
Good people = reliable information.
He took everything that Hamchan and his men taught him to heart. This is reality. This is what a teenager is. This is what a cool teenager is. This is what a cool trendy normal teenager is. Everything they taught him went straight to fact files because these guys genuinely care for him.
When the SW security group said they'll give the newbies a "welcome party". Oh, we're holding a social event! Because these reliable hyungs would never say anything they don't mean.
Dusik = honest good man. Anyone who's opposing him = definitely the bad man.
And it goes.
And maybe one day Dayun will meet 002 and the others perchance. You can't just introduce your "colleagues" by their numbers, could you? Do they know each other's name? This is Liam and you've met Maya. And uuuuuuuh.
002, the dependable wingman he is, "This is our youngest. His name is.. Boo." (Because he's been.. coming across this.. cartoon.. uh frequently. Not on his own accord, definitely.)
Dayun will look at him inquiringly which 002 will take as suspicion, "Boo?" Perhaps the boy's family name?
002 face straight and voice resolute so as not to get 001 in trouble. Whatever that may be. "It's short for Boo.. Boorian."
032 in retaliation, "And this hyung we call by the name Zach. It's short for his real actual name. Sasuke."
And thus, from that day forth, Ijin believed with all his heart that 002's name is Sasuke.
Hello, Sasuke? You will not believe what Jaehyung introduced to me today. It's a Japanese comic called, Naruto. There's a really popular character here who shares your name. I think you're more like his older brother though. I haven't read all of- What? What do you mean your name is not Sasuke? Boorian said- His name is not Boorian? Why did you guys lie to Dayun and me??
123 notes · View notes
teenspnwolfthe2nd · 8 months
Text
Can someone explain to me why a lot of people hate Yuna for Ijin? Like I understand not wanting romance in an action story I get it a lot of times romance ruins the plot because authors will sacrifice the storyline for fanservice. Teenage mercenary is a wonderful story that should NEVER even consider choosing between romance and action...
That being said if they HAD to include a romance (which since TM is about being a teenager they might) I feel Yuna is the best option for a fl.
Like she's not annoying about her crush, yes it is obvious but she has never pushed her feeling on to Ijin (which is 10 steps above other action FL)
That one time when Ijin hurt her because of his ptsd she handled it pretty well and didn't hold it against him, and also didn't let that singular incident change how she viewed him
She started out as friends with Ijins sister and her crush came naturally, however that doesn't mean that she ignores Dayun or only uses her to get to her brother.
She respects Ijins need for privacy ( the only reason she was in his business in the beginning was to protect her friend that she found out was horrifically bullied) even after he talked to her about her dad she didn't really push to know more.
Though she seems like your typical useless damsel in distress she has conviction and determination. I actually belive that Ijin deserves someone gentle, he's had enough roughness and gives someone a beat down every week. Yuna is protected by like 5 body guards she wouldn't need him to protect her. But he would need her gentleness to settle him I think there's a lot of potential depth to this ship.
Don't take me the wrong way that doesn't mean that I personally ship them Ijin and Seokju seem like a more fun pairing to me. But the people who hate on the ship confuse me.
87 notes · View notes
mistleria · 6 months
Text
Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby jin. Feral baby ji-
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
160 notes · View notes
manawari · 5 months
Text
Now collecting manhwa MCs whose names have "Jin" in them ✨
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
118 notes · View notes
iamumbra195 · 4 months
Text
I've been thinking for a while... are the numbers split by specializations?
In chapter 96, Ijin says that 005 is specialized specifically in assassinations and then he mentioned kidnapping and blackmail. So I've been thinking that certain numbers, because of their abilities, attitudes, or even their preferences specialize in certain things.
Let's take 004 and 006 for example. 004, while I believe he's fully capable of these things, doesn't specialize in info gathering or blackmail of any sort. I don't think he'd enjoy it and he's very temperamental. He even says at one point that he likes risking it instead of playing it safe and efficient the way Ijin did. He kinda seems like a loose canon. So like 005, who while incredibly intelligent is still reckless and gets angry very easily, I'm going to lump him in the area of assassination, specifically using closer combat like hand-to-hand, knives, and pistols. 006 on the other hand, is very well-suited for info-gathering and maybe even infiltration given all that we've seen from him in canon.
I'd like to say that Ijin and 002 are relatively on similar grounds and are very well-rounded in nearly everything which is why they're given the numbers they have and are regarded as the overall leaders.
So basically I think the numbers are split based on what they specialize in, whether that be intelligence, assassination, kidnapping, infiltration, maybe even robbery lol? What do you think?
75 notes · View notes
so-sures-blog · 3 months
Text
Kimbaps & Kind Talks
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Summary: a girl found a boy being cornered by some bullies. homeless, alone, and starving, the boy asked the girl if she could please buy him some food.
the girl said yes.
***
(Their first meeting isn't really a meeting, but more of a moment where their lives briefly touched then went their separate ways.
But everything starts from somewhere.)
***
She meets him again when she is walking home from school, the light of the sunset dying the sky hues of orange and gold.
They both stop, equally surprised when they see each other again.
“Oh, you’re the…” Dayeon trails off, not sure how to finish that sentence. Homeless boy? Runaway that was starving and asked me for food? Kid who’s all alone? None of those sound particularly appealing, and she doesn’t want to be rude.
While she’s lost in thought, the boy rummages through his pockets before finally pulling out what he wanted— the money she had given him the day before. She notices that half of it has been used.
“H—Here,” the boy holds out the crinkled money. “Thanks for before, you really saved me. This is all I have, but I'll pay back the rest soon.”
Dayeon hesitantly takes it. “Oh, you don't have to do this… will you have anything left for yourself?”
“I'll be alright.” He reassures her.
“Well, if you say so.” Dayeon goes to bow before she suddenly hears a stomach growl loudly. She looks up to see the boy turning bright red.
“Oh?”
“…”
Dayeon can't help but let out a soft laugh when she sees the boy's embarrassed face.
“You know, I'm actually feeling a little bit hungry myself. There's a convenience store right around the corner, care to join me?”
“ … yes, please.”
Dayeon begins walking, and after a moment, the boy follows her. Dayeon glances at him. She can already tell he's a bit on guard and on the quiet side, so she tries to loosen him up.
“You know, now that I think about it, I never got your name last night,” says Dayeon. The boy tenses for some reason, so Dayeon tries to put him at ease by introducing herself first. “I’m Dayeon.”
The boy hesitates, jaw working, like he was struggling with himself. Dayeon turns to look at him, and he meets her eyes. She waits, smiling patiently, and slowly, some of the tension dissolves in his shoulders.
“My name is… Isak.”
“Isak,” Dayeon repeats the foreign name slowly, and the boy gives a strange sort of shudder, like he's never heard his own name come out of another's mouth before. She eyes the reaction curiously and gives him a smile. “That's a nice name.”
The boy doesn't look like he knows what to say to that. “Um, thank you,” he says. His face is still stained with blush.
They walk in silence for a few minutes, and Dayeon steals another glance at him. He’s relaxed a bit more, so he isn't hiding his face under his cap like before, and now she can see the giant bruise swelling on his cheek.
“Hey,” she says, snapping his attention back to her. “Are you alright? You have…” Dayeon trails off and gestures helplessly to his face.
He blinks in surprise, almost as if he's startled she noticed the fresh bruise painting his face. “Oh. Um, yeah, I got into a fight earlier today.”
Dayeon gasps. “Was it those guys again?” She cries, dismayed.
Isak flinches. “Well, I did run into them again…”
Call it a habit she’s inherited from living with Ijin, but Dayeon is able to spot a half-truth a mile away. Her eyes flicker down to his hands.
(His knuckles were split and had fresh bruises. He didn’t carry himself as someone who had been injured. He hadn't been defending himself. He'd been fighting.)
A niggling feeling worms its way into her stomach.
“I see,” she says when she realizes she left him hanging. “You should be careful around here. Seoul is pretty safe, but there are a lot of gangs around these parts. Lots of rich kids try to pick fights with each other and get away with it because they have money.”
“Alright,” says Isak. He suddenly flinches like a thought has come to him and turns to her. “Will you be alright?”
Dayeon blinks, surprised. At first, she has no idea what he is talking about, but then she realizes what he means. She’s a teenage girl walking home all by herself in an area where she said there is a lot of criminal activity. And she knows firsthand how much men like to harass teenage girls.
His red-colored eyes stare into her, and it feels like he’s probing her soul for answers.
“I’ll be fine. I’m a fast runner,” Dayeon reassures him. “Lots of experience.” That probably wasn’t the most reassuring thing to say, but it was true. All the times of outrunning her bullies, drunk old men harassing her, and teenage boys who wouldn’t take no for an answer has practically turned her into a professional track star.
Gaining a brother had decreased those problems significantly, but old habits die hard.
Isak nods silently, and Dayeon somehow feels like he's more aware of what those experiences are than most boys are at their age.
They walk into the convenience store together, and Dayeon immediately sets out to ask Isak what he wants. He gives her a noncommittal shrug, so Dayeon is left nervously deciding what to pick out for him and second-guessing each item. Isak is hovering over her shoulder and trailing after her like a lost puppy, but every time Dayeon asks him what he would like he keeps on shrugging and saying variations of “I don't care” which inadvertently makes her more awkward. Finally, she suggests that they'll have better luck picking out items if they split up and choose.
Dayeon fingers the mouth of the cold soda, eyeing Isak across the store. He's studying the packages of kimbaps, looking a bit overwhelmed and flinching every time he meets the employee's gaze.
(Sometimes. Sometimes Ijin would flinch whenever someone called his name. Like he wasn’t used to it. Like he didn’t recognize it. Like he didn’t know it.
Like he was never called it.)
“ISAK!” Dayeon calls across the store, and he jerks so hard he knocks down the rows of food-filled plastic containers on the floor.
Dayeon is shocked. She didn’t know what she was expecting, but she didn't expect that reaction. Spotting the cashier scowling, she hurried over to Isak, who was hurriedly picking up the food.
“Sorry, sorry, sorry,” he mutters. His whole face is red with embarrassment.
“It's okay,” soothes Dayeon, helping him pick up the mess. “It's my fault for calling you so loudly in public. I didn't mean to startle you.”
Dayeon neatly stacks the meals on the shelves while Isak picks them up from the floor. She glances at him when he isn't looking. She doesn't even know why she is wary of him, but it's just something about this boy that is sending some sort of signal to her.
He's different. Not in the way of a foreigner, but of something else. He walks like he's half-expecting to be stabbed than be offered a handshake. His words are mindful, but not in the way of not knowing the language but of carefully wording out information.
And his eyes.
Watchful and wary, darting around like he is looking for something— or hiding from it.
He reminds her of Ijin, and she wants to know why.
And then she does.
It happens in an instant. So unnoticeable that Dayeon would have missed it if she was paying less attention. Isak hands her the final plastic container, and as he does so, the sleeve of his red hoodie slips up.
And she sees it.
There, on the inside of his left wrist, written in small fine-print black ink, is:
032.
Suddenly, the air just leaves her lungs. Her ears can hear nothing but a high-pitched ringing. Dayeon suddenly feels dizzy and faint.
(Her brother had a tattoo on his wrist. It was small and he tried to hide it, but they lived together so it was impossible to, really. Sometimes, when they washed dishes together, he would pull up his sleeves and Dayeon would catch a glimpse.
Inside of his right wrist was the number 001 .)
Dayeon tries to force herself to think it's a coincidence. This boy was likely a runaway, and that's why he wasn't used to his name. He was so jumpy and careful because he had likely lived on the streets, not because he was looking out for something. He had the tattoo because — because — just because!
(Something tells her it isn't.)
“Hey, are you okay?” Somebody asks. Dayeon snaps out of her daze to see the boy — Isak — staring at her with concerned red-colored eyes. His brow is furrowed, and it causes a crease in his face.
“Yes, I'm fine,” Dayeon's heart is pounding, and she doesn't know why. She forces a smile. “Sorry, I just blanked for a second.”
Shame and guilt sweep under her skin. Who is she to throw her half-baked suspicions onto him? She's probably on edge from Yeona’s kidnapping and seeing that blond foreigner that had thrown Ijin off for days. Right now, she’s just jumping to conclusions about who or what this boy is with only a gut feeling and circumstantial evidence.
From now on, Dayeon would just treat him as a— a normal boy.
In recompense, she offers him the ice-cold soda and he takes it confusedly. “We still have to pay?”
“It's for your bruise,” she says, gently tapping the side of her own jaw.
He blinks, startled. “Oh. Thank you.”
“No problem. Did you want to buy this or are you ready to pay?”
“Pay, please.”
Isak trails after her, soda to his cheek as he watches her pay. They make their way onto the porch, and as soon as she dumps all the food on the table, Isak gobbles it up like it's his last meal.
"You should leave some for spending next time. I wasn't expecting you to pay me back,” says Dayeon as Isak chomps down on the kimbaps.
"Of course I should pay you back. You're not supposed to wait until you have extra to pay someone back for their help." Isak scoffs.
"True," Dayeon counters with a smile. "But haven't you ever heard the saying, 'kindness is free'?"
The boy lets out a sharp, barking laugh like she’s said something hilarious. “Not from where I’m from.”
“Well, then clearly you didn’t grow up in the right place,” says Dayeon.
Isak stares at her, a curious, surprised, studying look appearing as he takes her in consideration. After a moment, his mouth twitches into something of a smile. “Maybe,” he agrees softly.
There's a beat of awkward silence as the two teenagers stare at each other until Dayeon clears her throat and gestures to the food. Isak flushes and digs in.
Dayeon can't help but stare at him while he's busy eating.
She didn't really notice the last time they met, but this was her first time seeing the boy in a real light instead of being cast in shadows or the dim glow of the convenience store.
His face is fair and slender, wisps of blond hair escaping his black cap. His lashes were blond, but they were long and thick and in the dying sun, cast shadows under the startling red-colored eyes that Dayeon first noticed.
He was actually… really pretty.
Dayeon knows that pretty isn’t really something that should describe a boy, but she didn’t know how else to describe him. He just… was.
Were all Western boys this pretty?
His eyes flick up questioningly, and Dayeon practically jumps when she meets his gaze.
“So, how old are you?” Dayeon blurts out the first question that comes to mind.
“Me? I'm seventeen…”
Dayeon gasps, a pleasantly surprised smile blooming. “You're my age.”
“R-Really? We're the same exact age?” Isak looks up, shocked, like he’s never spoken to another person the same age before.
“Yup, I’m seventeen years old too!” Dayeon beams. “Let’s speak comfortably now!”
“O-Okay. Do what you want…”
Dayeon looks at the kimbap he’s eating longingly. She’s feeling kind of hungry right now, but it would be rude to eat the food she had bought for Isak when he was likely much more hungry than she was. Isak notices her staring and nudges a kimbap towards her with a slight smile.
“You’re from overseas, right?” Dayeon asks, gratefully taking the kimbap from him.
“Yeah, I’m traveling right now.”
“With your friends?”
“By myself.”
“By yourself?” Dayeon exclaims, far too loud.
Isak flinches. “Y-Yeah.”
Dayeon had to physically bite back the concerned questions rising up from her tongue. Why on earth was a kid her age traveling all alone? Where was his family?
(Who even was he?)
“Oh wow. You’re traveling all alone? How many countries have you been to?” Dayeon asks once she’s sure the concern won’t leak into her voice. At least her question is genuine in its awe and curiosity.
“I dunno, I never counted, but probably over twenty countries…” Isak trails off and shrugs, obviously relieved she isn’t pressing his traveling alone-ness.
“Whoa… you must really like to travel,” comments Dayeon.
“Not really, I just sort of ended up with this job where I usually have to travel to different countries to complete different assignments.” Isak fiddles with the cap of his soda, and Dayeon clocks in on the nervous gesture instantly.
(Not telling the full truth, then. Hiding something.)
“What about you?” Isak asks, and Dayeon snaps out of it.
“Huh?”
“You seem really interested in going abroad. Your eyes lit up,” says Isak, then seems to immediately regret admitting to paying that much attention to her. His face turns bright red, and he stutters, “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean—”
“It’s alright. You’re right anyway,” Dayeon laughs good-naturedly. “What person wouldn’t like to travel to other countries? I’ve stayed in Korea my whole life. I’ve never even left Seoul.”
“Why not?” Isak asks curiously.
Dayeon shrugs. “Money expenses, mostly. Going abroad is pretty expensive, and I don’t have that kind of money.” She thinks of the first time she and Yeona had met up after she’d returned from America and how she had devoured the stories Yeona had from overseas. She had brushed off the question of wanting to study abroad, but secretly, in the darkest corner of her heart, she wanted to go.
But then if she did, her grandpa would be all alone… and Ijin too…
“Not to mention, my family’s here. I would get homesick.” Her lips curl in a slightly wry smile. Maybe she just wasn’t meant for traveling.
“Oh,” says Isak quietly. He looks like he wants to say something else, but ultimately stays silent.
Dayeon studies him for a bit. He looks lost in thought, forlorn, and runs his slender finger around the soda can again and again. Strangely enough, she finds that she doesn’t like that expression on him.
“What about you?”
“Huh?”
“You must speak a lot of different languages if you're traveling all over the place,” says Dayeon. “You’re Korean is very good. How long have you been studying?”
The boy flushes but can’t hide the proud smile on his face. “A few months.”
“A few months?” Dayeon splutters, and the boy laughs.
(He has a nice laugh.)
“Yeah. I also speak English, Mandarin, and Arabic. I know a bit of Spanish, too. And—” he cuts off when he sees the slack-jawed look on her face and laughs again.
“You know that many languages?” Dayeon stutters, disbelief written all over her face. "And you learned Korean in just a couple of months? How is that even possible?”
“To be fair, I knew a bit of Korean before I started to learn it. There were a couple of Korean missionaries in the place I grew up, and I had a… friend, who spoke it when we first met, so I sort of understood the basics. To be honest, the one who knew the most Korean was my broth—”
Isak stops, his smile freezing as his fingers tighten around the soda until indents appear in the metal. He suddenly looks lost, red-colored eyes flickering, and biting down on his lip so hard she’s surprised it’s not bleeding.
Dayeon swallows; a sudden knot in her stomach.
Oh. She’s hit a sore spot, hasn’t she?
“I’m sorry,” she offers, quietly. She recognizes that grief-look on his face.
The boy snaps his eyes up, looking like he is about to snarl, ‘What does sorry even do?’ when he sees her eyes and realizes how genuine she is; how honest. She knew, better than anyone, that sorrys couldn’t take back the time spent in pain from loss. But as she grew older, she realized that people said them because they were offering condolences, showing their sympathy, offering support to ease the burden of grief. It wasn’t to make them magically feel better, it wasn't meant to do anything, it was—
It was just meant to tell them, subtly, that they cared.
He nods, and the grip on his can slowly relax. Silence grows between them, and she feels awkward and guilty for being the cause of it.
“So how long will you be in Korea?” Dayeon asks.
Isak pauses, a strange expression crossing his face. “... Until I'm done with things here,” he says, like something final.
Dayeon can sense the undercurrent of something but decides not to press it. “I see. You must be staying nearby since I ran into you again.”
“No, I just had something to take care of here… but I guess you live around here?” He suddenly straightens, eyes wide as a hand covers his mouth. “Ah, that's a rude question, isn't it?”
Dayeon laughs. “No it's not. My school is nearby—”
The next following moments happen in the span of three seconds.
Dayeon screams as out of nowhere Ijin tackles Isak, sending the food tumbling to the ground and the table flying as they grapple.
In the blink of an eye, Ijin snatches a single chopstick and tries stabbing it into Isak's eye. Isak grabs his wrist, barely blocking it, and Ijin snatches another chopstick with his other hand and slashes at him. Isak twists his neck to dodge, releasing his grip. The air shrivels up in her lungs when Isak kicks Ijin right in his broken ribs. Ijin falters with pain, and Isak is able to push him off and spring to his feet, her brother doing the same.
Dayeon’s feet are frozen to the ground. The whole fight happened so fast, and it was lethal. If Isak hadn’t dodged the slash to the neck, it would’ve hit an artery.
Ijin would’ve killed him.
Over her brother's shoulder, Dayeon meets Isak's eyes wildly. His eyes flicker to her before turning back to Ijin.
And then he begins speaking in a foreign language.
Dayeon feels her heart stop.
The language is guttural, tongue-twisting, and undeniably unlike any language Dayeon has ever heard. But she recognizes it. She recognizes it because she’s heard it before.
(Yeona’s kidnappers spoke it. That blond foreigner man spoke it.
Ijin spoke it.)
Dayeon finally finds her voice.
“Ijin?”
They both stop.
“Ijin, what are you doing here? What's going on?” Dayeon says desperately.
Ijin doesn't turn to look at her. “You should get out of here, now.”
“Huh? What do you mean…” Dayeon's voice drifts off as she notices the dangerous look in his eyes. He's looking past her, right at Isak, like he’s a threat, like he’s dangerous. She recognizes that look… it was the same one he had worn when he rescued her from Yeona’s kidnappers.
Cold and ruthless, just like how he fought.
Dayeon's eyes drop down to his shirt, and to her horror she sees it bloodied, his side slashed. Was he stabbed?
“Ijin, you're bleeding…” she whispers.
“You two… know each other?” A voice breaks through her panic, and she turns to see Isak staring at them.
“Huh? He’s my brother.”
“As in…”
“My older brother.” Dayeon says.
Isak struggles to keep his face from showing anything and fails spectacularly.
“I'm sorry, he's not usually like this. There must be some sort of misunderstanding…” Dayeon falters off when she sees the look on the boy's face. It's harsh and disbelieving. The boy looks nothing like the one she'd been happily chatting with a minute ago, and it makes Dayeon come to a chilling realization.
Right. How well can she know a boy she only met a day ago?
Ijin moves in front of her, protecting her. “Can you give us a moment, Dayeon?” He speaks up.
Dayeon jolts. “Huh?”
Ijin stares at the boy, hard and intense as he glares right back. She can feel a fight rearing up, the tension crackling in the air.
Dayeon wants to say no. She wants to argue. But as she gazes between the two of them, she knew she had no place here.
“… Okay.”
Dayeon walks off the porch, her heart racing and legs numb as she leaves the two of them standing there. Even though they’re busy glaring at each other, she can still somehow feel their eyes burning into her back until she rounds the corner of a building and leaves their sight.
As soon as she does she doubles over, gasping. Her heart is pounding out of her chest and her legs are weak and shaking.
The fighting skills. The mannerisms. The foreign language. The tattoo.
This boy was a part of Ijin’s past.
And she had left him alone with him.
Dayeon pokes her head out from the pillar she is hiding behind. Right now, her brother and the boy aren't currently fighting, but if they did, Dayeon had one hand on her cell phone, ready to call the police. While she doubted they could do anything, at least it would break up the fight and send the boy running.
Ready to duck if they looked her way, Dayeon watches as the tension slowly works its way out of the atmosphere. Suddenly, Ijin bends down… and starts picking up the trash? Dayeon blinks, hardly able to believe her eyes as the boy he had previously tried to murder, the one who had been glaring daggers at her brother like he was his most hated enemy, bent down to help him.
Dayeon gapes, rubs her eyes, and wonders if she’s dreaming.
The two finish cleaning, and the boy begins walking away before he suddenly looks up— and meets her eyes. Dayeon startles, and even he looks surprised. Ijin joins the boy, and they exchange a few words before Ijin makes his way towards her while the boy hangs back.
Dayeon hurries over to Ijin. “Are you okay?” She asks urgently.
Ijin looks down at her, at the worry pouring off her in waves, and softens. “I'm fine,” he says.
“Is… he okay?” Dayeon glances at the boy, who is anxiously hovering a few feet away. He jumps when he meets her eyes.
“ … Yes. You don't need to worry, Dayeon,” says Ijin.
“Good. Then I want to talk to him.” She looks up at Ijin boldly. “Alone.”
Her brother looks like he's about to argue before he stops. He takes in the stubborn set of her shoulders and the way her lips draw into a firm line and knows there's no dissuading her.
Dayeon takes a deep breath, looks over at the boy, and refuses to show her nerves. He was fine. She was fine. Ijin wouldn't allow him near her if he was going to attack her, nor would he be acting all buddy-buddy if they weren't friends.
Dayeon slowly approaches the boy, giving him plenty of time to panic.
“So.” Dayeon says. Just because he and Ijin were on good terms now doesn't mean she's about to go easy on him.
“So.” The boy echoes. He looks mildly afraid of what she's about to say next.
“Would it be wrong of me to assume that you were the one who stabbed my brother?” Dayeon goes right for the throat.
The boy pales. “Um—”
“And would it be a shot in the dark to assume that your business in Korea has suddenly ended and you have to leave?” Dayeon arches her brow.
The boy looks like he quite possibly wants to die on the spot. Dayeon wonders if it's possible for the blood to both rush to your face and leave it at the same time.
“I—I'm sorry,” the boy blurts out almost desperately. His hands wring nervously. “It was a misunderstanding.”
Dayeon says nothing but shows that she's listening. The boy continues rambling. “I thought— I thought your brother had something to do with my brother, and I was angry and impulsive, so I came here without thinking. But it turns out I was wrong and my brother is alive. But, um— I'm sorry for attacking your brother. And dragging you in it. It was— I didn’t mean for it to happen.” The boy’s eyes are wide and sincere as he fumbles through his apology.
Dayeon studies him for a long time. “... I believe you,” she says, and means it. From the look on the boy's face, she can tell he's surprised she does too.
“I just have one question,” she says, and he tenses. “Your name.”
“Huh?”
“The name you gave me. Isak. Was it your real name, or a fake one?”
The boy stares at her.
Dayeon had just blurted out the question and now immediately felt embarrassed under the boy’s gaze. Heat rises to her cheeks.
Well, too late to take it back now.
To be honest, Dayeon wasn't really sure why she asked that. She has lots of questions, and he likely had lots of answers. She doubted he would have told her the full truth, but the point is that she could have asked him anything.
But for some reason, the only thing she can focus on is his name.
(She knew, vaguely, that names were important where they came from. It was the only thing that couldn't be taken away from them.)
The boy stares at her, studying, suspicious, like he is trying to see if she has any ulterior motives. Dayeon keeps her eyes genuine and posture open, letting him see she isn’t hiding anything. Her heart is beating rapidly, and she’s strangely nervous, but she hopes he can see her.
Finally, he relaxes, and a small smile crosses his face. “Yeah, it is.”
“Really? That's your real name?” Happiness bursts from her chest.
“Yeah,” Isak smiles.
(He has a nice smile, too.)
“Right.” Dayeon sighs and leans back on her heels. “Well, that's all I wanted to ask. Thank you for answering my question… Isak.”
“No problem… Dayeon.” Isak turns scarlet when he says her name.
“Good luck in whatever you have to do,” says Dayeon. “And take care.”
“Thank you,” replies Isak. He hesitates, then almost sheepishly, adds “... you too.”
Dayeon beams.
Ijin approaches, and Isak jumps in what looks like fear and before backing up from her. Dayeon raises a hand to wave goodbye, and with a small smile hidden under his cap, Isak does the same.
Now for Ijin.
“So you two knew each other?” Dayeon asks once Isak leaves.
Ijin jumps. “Yeah.”
“Then why were you so harsh earlier?” Dayeon watches him closely. She knew she had said not to ask anything about his past, but she wasn’t really breaking her promise. He had attacked a kid out in the open and then made up with him in the next ten minutes. Surely he was expecting her to ask some questions about that?
But she had literally seen him try to stab someone’s eye out with a chopstick, so she was curious about what kind of excuse he would come up with—
“I thought some weird guy was hitting on you because you are pretty,” Ijin whips out, cool as can be.
Dayeon’s jaw drops. “What?”
She stares at Ijin.
Ijin stares back.
They both just stood there, staring at each other blankly for what feels like forever.
“Let’s just… let’s just go back home,” Dayeon manages faintly.
“Alright. Are you going to tell Grandpa about this?”
“Only if you don’t let me stitch up that wound, I will.”
***
It isn’t until much later when it hits her.
After Dayeon had done an appropriate amount of fussing over Ijin’s wound and had cleaned and bandaged it before he had kindly but firmly kicked her out of his room so he could brood, she was sitting in her room contemplating the day.
Meeting Isak had revealed a lot about Ijin and his past today. She closes her eyes, her thoughts flying around like a whirlwind in her brain: comrades and numbers and fighting; quick-to-kill hands, secret names, and tattoos. Even though there was animosity, it’s clear there’s some sort of innate trust in each other. Bonds are hard to break, after all.
That blond man that came before Isak— he’s another one of Ijin’s old comrades. Yet when they saw each other, they were eyeing each other like predators ready to kill one another instead of friends. Old comrades — friends — but ready to kill each other on a moment's notice.
(Who’s notice?)
Dayeon sighs and opens her eyes. It seems the more conclusions she comes to leave more questions to be answered. It feels like there is a string being drawn in her chest, slowly becoming tighter and tighter the more Ijin’s secrecy piles up. She fears one day it might snap, and whatever emotions she has carefully stored away will come breaking out.
Dayeon absently scrawls 032 in her notebook. She wonders if he’s somehow managed to leave the country yet, or if he’s still in the city. It would be hard to leave Korea without any money—
Her brain screeches to a halt. Wait. He didn't have any money. He was broke. Which means he likely wouldn't be able to eat for who-knows-how-long again.
Dayeon jumps to her feet and begins knocking on Ijin’s door frantically. “Ijin! Ijin, open up!” She whispers.
After a moment, he pokes his head out, dressed in new clothes. “Dayeon? What is it?”
“We need to go to the convenience store. Now.” She says urgently. “Do you have your wallet?”
To his credit, Ijin doesn't question her even though he looks extremely confused. He nods, and soon he and Dayeon are on their way to the convenience store by their apartment.
“Why are we going to the store in the middle of the night?” Ijin asks.
“Your friend,” Dayeon begins, and ignores the way he subtly tenses. “He's broke. I forgot to mention it to you, but that's the reason you found us eating together. He was starving so I offered to pay for his food.”
Whatever Ijin is expecting her to say, it certainly isn't that.
“Oh,” he says. “You gave him food?” For a split-second she can see fondness for his old comrade — no matter what history there was — play on the shadows of his face.
“Yeah. And we’re going to buy him food now. Do you have any idea where he’s staying?”
“A couple but…” Ijin hesitates. “You can’t come.” It might be dangerous, is what’s left unsaid, and she doesn’t argue.
“So I won't be able to see him again?” Dayeon asks. “That's too bad. I thought he was pretty cute.”
Ijin trips on the curb as they enter the convenience store.
“No.”
“Yes.”
“No!”
“Yes!”
Dayeon laughs at the scandalized expression her brother wears as he buries his face in his hands. He looks like he regrets this entire conversation. Dayeon flits around the store, grabbing food and drinks from the shelves like a storm. Ijin watches her and pulls out his wallet when she joins him by the cashier.
The lady begins scanning and bagging the items and Dayeon’s hand lingers on one of the packages. It's one of the meals she had spotted Isak wanting, but didn’t buy because she was paying.
Dayeon stares at the packaged meal, and in a split-second decision, digs into her bag and pulls out a sticky note. Ignores Ijin, who has given up all pretenses of busying himself with paying and is blatantly staring, and writes down a note.
Dayeon caps the pen, forces down her embarrassed hesitation, and smooths the sticky note down on the plastic. She fixes Ijin with a stern look. “No. Peeking.”
“What’s so important about that note that I can’t even see it?” Ijin scowls— no, sulks.
“It’s nothing,” Dayeon says quickly. “Really. Just… an inside joke.”
Ijin raises an eyebrow about that, likely wondering how Dayeon and Isak had gotten around to sharing inside jokes, but thankfully doesn’t press the issue.
The woman who was checking out their items — and Ijin, by default — looks jealous of her boldness.
Dayeon avoids each of their gazes.
***
Isak finally threads the last stitch through his flesh and gasps in pain. It’s been around half an hour since 001 had come and saved his life, and he had finally managed to patch up all the injuries Aiden had left him.
He eyes his blood-soaked hoodie crumpled in a corner and scowls. Aiden, that bastard; that was his favorite hoodie. Blood took forever to get out. That coward had almost managed to bring him down with an ambush— if he had fought him head on, there was no chance the mercenary would’ve been able to land as many hits as he did.
He pants, giving himself a moment to calm his heart and settle his thoughts. He had to get back to The Camp quick, before whatever assholes they sent next decided to fuck him up even more. He is in no condition to fight, and the thought of moving caused him physical pain right now, but he has to get out of here before whatever shady cleanup crew 001 got his hands on in this country came over.
Isak eyes the plastic bag on his right. 001 had said his sister had told him he was broke and had bought him food.
… Maybe he can stay for a quick meal. Now that the immediate danger is gone and his pain has subsided into a dull ache, he’s actually feeling kind of hungry. 001 had already dragged Aiden’s ass out of his hideout, and it would take some time before someone came to clean up the evidence. He has time.
With a groan, Isak reaches over and hooks his fingers into the plastic to drag it forward. The bag is bulging with the amount of food stuffed into it. Isak roots through the packages and recognizes some of them as the food he had been eyeing at the convenience store when he was with 001’s sister.
His fingers brush against something odd. Frowning, Isak pulls out a plastic package of food— with a sticky note attached. He peels off the note.
Don’t forget kindness is free, but if you really want to pay me back, then remember to come back and say hello!
— Dayeon
He can’t help but laugh. He laughs until his ribs hurt; until he’s breathless and his cheeks ache from grinning ear to ear.
Holy shit. That girl is something else.
From the very beginning she’s made an impact on him; he doubts he can ever forget her if he tried. She paid for his food when he was starving— and went even more by leaving every piece of money in her wallet for him because she knew he needed it more than she did.
When they met again, she was still kind, still caring: offering him companionship, sympathy, care— even though they were practically strangers. He thinks of her kindness that is so rare from where he’s from, her knowing eyes, her secret smiles.
It was so weird; in the short time they met, he’d been so aware of her. She had gotten him to let his guard down in such a short period of time; she’d gotten him to talk about his childhood, about his brother—
Even when he had almost fucked up and killed her brother, she gave a chance to explain himself and apologize— and she accepted. She forgave him, and now, was leaving him with a final gift.
Haven’t you ever heard the saying kindness is free?
He rubs his thumb over the ink on the sticky note. He still didn’t believe that, still believed that kindness can still be used as a way to stab someone in the back, but—
He guesses with Dayeon, it might be true.
***
43 notes · View notes
iwillfightformydream · 4 months
Text
Like Ijin should act like a feral kitten
At a social gathering, Ijin would likely stay on the edges, just watching and waiting to react.
When someone first meets Ijin he shows a bit of defensive behavior, but overtime and positive interactions, Ijin gradually become more comfortable and open to socializing.
51 notes · View notes