inniehood
There was something wrong about the way they understood each other-too exact, too effortless, like wolves raised in the same dark. Jeongin and Seungmin didn't speak much in public, but when they did, the air changed. Their silence wasn't absence; it was code. It thrummed with shared memory, unspoken promises, and a violence only they seemed to find comforting. When Jeongin tilted his head, Seungmin already knew what needed to be done. When Seungmin's gaze narrowed, Jeongin was already moving, already smiling in that quiet, razor-thin way.
They didn't touch often, but when they did, it lingered-hands brushing in passing like the echo of something forbidden, something understood too deeply to name. It wasn't affection in any traditional sense. It was loyalty sharpened to obsession, a closeness that didn't allow for air. They could be across a room and still feel each other's tension, drawn by some gravity no one else could feel. And when they were alone-truly alone-there was a kind of unraveling that happened. Jeongin would laugh, low and hoarse, the sound almost tender if not for the edge. Seungmin would watch him with something feral under his skin, like restraint gnawed to the bone.
Others sensed it but couldn't define it. It wasn't love. It wasn't hate. It was something older, hungrier. Something that pulsed beneath the surface of every glance, every shared silence. They needed each other the way a wound needs salt-painful, essential, and never quite clean.