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Chapter 28 - Chapter 27: Danoh

The university campus transformed almost overnight. The frantic energy of finals and the heavy tension of the project were replaced by a hollow, echoing stillness as students fled for winter break. Jiyoon had gone to her grandparents' house in Busan, and even Sunho-sunbae had vanished into some high-end internship in Gangnam.

​For me, winter break meant more shifts at the restaurant and more time spent trying to make our apartment feel less like a crime scene and more like a home. The door had been fixed—the splintered wood replaced by a solid, reinforced frame that Uncle had insisted on—but the memory of the "thud" still lingered in the hallway.

​I was sitting in the back of the empty restaurant during the mid-afternoon lull, my laptop open. Professor Choi had sent out an optional winter research task regarding automated security protocols—a topic that felt a little too close to home, but I needed the distraction.

​The bell chimed.

​I didn't look up, assuming it was a delivery driver or an early customer. "We open for dinner at five," I said habitually.

​"Does that apply to technical consultants too?"

​My heart gave a sharp, sudden kick against my ribs. I looked up. Hanbin was standing by the door. He wasn't wearing his usual black hoodie; instead, he had on a dark grey wool coat that made him look older, more like a professional and less like the "Ice Prince" of the lab. His bandages were gone, replaced by thin strips of medical tape over his knuckles.

​"Hanbin," I breathed, quickly closing a tab on my laptop that had nothing to do with research. "What are you doing here? You should be resting. Or at home with Harin."

​He walked over, his movements fluid and calm. He pulled out the chair opposite me and sat down without being asked. "Harin is at a taekwondo camp. And my parents are working. The house is too quiet."

​He glanced at my screen. "Security protocols? You're working on the optional task?"

​"I needed something to keep my brain from looping," I admitted, feeling a flush creep up my neck. "But I'm stuck on the encryption layer. It keeps rejecting the key."

​Hanbin didn't say a word. He simply reached out and turned my laptop toward him. For the next ten minutes, the only sound in the restaurant was the rhythmic, rapid-fire clack-clack-clack of his typing. I watched his fingers—long, steady, and precise. There was no hesitation in his movements. He coded the way most people breathe.

​"There," he said, turning the laptop back to me. "Your logic was fine, but your syntax was too rigid. You have to allow the system some room to negotiate with the user."

​"Allowing room for negotiation," I whispered, looking at the code. "Is that what you're doing too?"

​Hanbin's gaze lifted from the screen to my face. The air between us suddenly felt thick, like a physical weight. The "Ice Prince" persona was there, but it was translucent. I could see the boy from the memorial park underneath—the one who was tired of being alone.

​"I don't know how to negotiate, Danoh-ya," he said, his voice dropping to that low, intimate register. "I only know how to build walls or tear them down. Everything in between... it's just static to me."

​"Maybe the static is the best part," I said, leaning in slightly. "It's where the music is, if you listen close enough."

​He looked at me for a long beat. I saw his eyes drop to my mouth for a split second before darting back to my eyes. It was a moment of profound weakness, a crack in his architecture that he couldn't patch. He reached out, his hand hovering over mine on the table. He didn't touch me—not yet—but I could feel the heat radiating from his skin.

​He was vulnerable. And for the first time, I realized I was just as weak for him. I wasn't just grateful he saved me; I was beginning to crave the silence we shared.

​"Hyung! You're here!"

​The spell broke instantly as Doyoon came charging down the stairs, his school bag swinging wildly.

​Hanbin pulled his hand back, his expression smoothing into a mask of cool indifference so quickly it made my head spin. "Doyoon-ah."

​"Hyung, you have to help me with my math homework. I have a winter packet and it's literally a war crime," Doyoon pleaded, pulling up a chair next to Hanbin.

​Hanbin looked at me, a silent question in his eyes. I gave him a small, encouraging nod.

​"Fine," Hanbin sighed, though he didn't look entirely annoyed. "Show me the 'war crime,' Doyoon."

​As I watched the two of them—the brilliant, silent genius and my loud, chaotic brother—I realized that the "static" was already starting to resolve into a melody. We weren't a couple. We weren't "in love" in the way the movies described it.

​We were just two people who had stopped being afraid of the cold because we were standing in the same room.

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