SEEING THIS ON HIS IG LITERALLY MADE ME SCREAM
Peekaboo.
hi! idk if u do other than squid game or lee byun hun but could u please do study group yoon gamin x y/n fanfiction? đ„č
Hi! Unfortunately, I don't know who Yoon Gamin is đ„č So far what I can do are Squid Game fanfictions (Hwang In-ho & Salesman), and some Call of Duty characters (Soap, Price, Gaz, Ghost, etc.).
But I'll try to learn who Yoon Gamin is! đ
Lovinâ the MW2 characters so much i did a little comic style version of each one!Â
Summary: After the Red Light, Green Light game, the players vote to continue or leave the games with their own shares. In-ho votes for X this time, and the players are all sent home. Gi-hun goes back to the outside world and finds In-ho in a convenience store, but he knows him as Young-il.
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The warehouse reeked of stale sweat and blood as the players crowded into the middle, awaiting their turn to vote to continue or leave the games. The voting box was placed at the center of the room, ready for everyone to decide their life.
The red and blue buttons blinked softly on its surface like a heartbeat, waiting. For some, it was hope. For others, it was a cruel tease of a chance to escape.Â
Gi-hunâs hands trembled as the last player, 001, took their turn. The vote had been close â shockingly so. The players were divided to Xs and Os, who had been nearly neck-and-neck after the Red Light, Green Light game bled the truth into their bones.
91 people died in less than five minutes into the game. There was no sugar-coating on such a bloody and violent scene. The gunshots still echoed behind their eyes.
Player 001 seemed to think first before pressing one of the buttons, adding to the tension. Gi-hun whispered under his breath as if he cheered for 001 to vote for X, so all of them could go home, and everyone could still have a chance to be saved.Â
Or was it?
Was it really because he wanted everyone to be saved, or just to prove to the system that there is still something good in humanity?
Then, a click.
The computer above showed the score of votes, seeing a close call.Â
X - 183, O - 182
A crowd of cheer erupted inside the warehouse, only to be interrupted by the lights being shut off, then a hiss of air followed. Gi-hunâs vision blurred, his heart pounded as he struggled to stay upright, but the weight of exhaustion and chloroform dragged him into darkness.Â
ââ
Gi-hun awoke to the sting of cold pavement scraping his cheek.
Rain drizzled softly on the city street as Gi-hun groaned and pushed himself onto his hands and knees. The vanâs taillights disappeared into the night, and the alley it had dumped him into was as empty as it was unfamiliar. He was back in Seoul, just like last time.
He wiped his nose with the back of his hand and froze, only to find a small, rectangular shape sitting in his palm, wrapped in plastic. It was a cassette tape, seemingly new, with three shapes on it - triangle, circle, and square. His pulse kicked into high gear as he looked around, but no one was in sight. Just the eerie hum of a city that truly never slept.
Gi-hun pulled the tape closer and saw a faint marking on the side, written in black ink.
â456.â
Gi-hunâs breath clouded in the cool air as he stood outside the nondescript apartment door, knuckles poised mid-air. The city buzzed below like it always had. But in his chest, something old had awakened. The tape sat like lead in his jacket pocket.
The door creaked open before he could knock, seeing Jun-ho staring back at him, who seemed scruffy, leaner, and shadows carved beneath his eyes.
âGi-hun,â Jun-ho said, his eyes with a hint of question as he looked at him. âYouâre back. How?â
Gi-hun stepped in without asking, pulling the cassette from his jacket and showing it to Jun-ho. He immediately closed the door as Gi-hun placed the cassette on the kitchen table like a loaded gun.
Jun-ho narrowed his eyes. âWhat is that?â
âA message from the inside,â Gi-hunâs voice was low and hoarse. âThereâs something else. They took out the tracker.â
Jun-ho blinked. âWhat?â
âIn my tooth. Itâs gone. Someone knew it was there. They knew it from the from start,â Gi-hunâs hands trembled as he rubbed at his jaw.
A long silence followed, broken only by the soft click of Jun-ho inserting the cassette into an old player and hitting play. The tape hissed before starting, then came a voice.
âI must admit, watching you squirm has been⊠entertaining.â
A soft static crackles.
âGi-hun, you shouldâve taken your prize and disappeared. But I suppose youâve never known when to walk away to try and be a hero.â
A pause came, then a faint sound that seemed like footsteps or breathing.Â
âYou thought you were clever. Hiding a tracker in a tooth? Cute. But Iâve been watching longer than youâve been planning.â
The voice lowers, almost a whisper now. A sharp breath caught in Gi-hunâs throat.
âYou shouldâve stayed gone, Seong Gi-hun. You want to expose us? Tear everything down? Fine. But know this: while you waste time chasing shadows, weâve already found her.â
Jun-hoâs head snapped toward Gi-hun.
âShe looks so much like her mother.â
Gi-hun surged forward and slammed a fist on the table. âYou son of aââ
The player stopped as Gi-hun was shaking now, clenching his teeth, curling his fists until they turned white. âHe knows about Ga-yeong. Heâs threatening my daughter.â
Jun-hoâs mouth opened, then shut. Something passed behind his eyes, something along the lines of guilt, recognition, or restraint. The cassette whirred softly behind them, tape still spooling, like a ticking clock counting down to something neither of them could stop.
The day when the line between brother and monster would no longer be a line, but a fog â bleeding through every breath he took, every step he retraced. But knowing that the voice belonged to his brother, crackling through the cassette player, was like being buried alive in guilt all over again.Â
He hadnât slept much since returning from searching around the islands. Sleep came in bursts, always haunted by the rhythmic thud of bodies hitting the ground, the clicking of guns disguised as toys.Â
And his brotherâs face. Always, his brotherâs face.
But Gi-hunâs reaction had shaken something loose in him. That rage and fear. It wasnât just about revenge anymore. Now, it was personal for him too. They crossed a line.
Jun-ho watched Gi-hun pace the room like a cornered animal. He knew that look. He had seen it in the mirror for years.
What if Jun-ho had pulled the trigger first? What if he didnât hesitate back then, on the cliffâŠ?
Jun-ho swallowed hard, his voice hollow as he broke the silence. âThereâs a chance itâs a bluff.â
Gi-hun rounded on him. âWould you bet your daughterâs life on that?â
Jun-ho didnât answer. In fact, he couldnât. Because deep down, he knew In-ho never bluffed.
Jun-ho walked into the bathroom, shut the door behind him, and leaned heavily on the sink. In the mirror, his reflection stared back with eyes that didnât belong to the cop who once believed in justice. They were the eyes of someone who knew too much â who lived too long in the underworld without dying.Â
He couldnât tell Gi-hun the truth â how he knew it was his brother whoâs been running the games along and was a player. Because he knew that if he did, Gi-hun would run into hell blind.
ââ
The rain pattered against the glass as Gi-hun sat at the tiny plastic table near the window, slurping instant ramen like it was the first meal he had in days. In truth, it probably was. He stared into the broth as if it could answer the questions clawing at his brain.
The bell above the door jingled softly. Gi-hun barely glanced up, until he heard a voice.
âMind if I sit?â
Gi-hun looked up, almost startled. A man stood across from him, casual in posture but sharp in the eyes. He wore a weathered jacket, sleeves slightly too long, and a disarming smile on his face.
âI saw you from the inside,â the man added. âThought you looked familiar.â
Gi-hun blinked. âHave we met?â
The man nodded. âBriefly, I think. In the games.â
Gi-hun studied his face, but nothing rang a bell. Still, something about the man was unsettlingly calm.Â
âYou played?â Gi-hun asked.
The man took the seat across from him, folding his hands. âFirst game was Red Light, Green Light. It was total chaos. I tapped out early.â He took the seat across from Gi-hun. âOh, and Iâm Young-il, by the way.â
Gi-hun nodded. âGi-hun.â
Young-ilâs eyes lit up with interest. âSo, Itâs true then. Youâre the winner from the last game.â
Gi-hun didnât answer right away, but the manâs gaze was unwavering, so he shrugged. âYeah, if you could call it that. I spent months trying to figure out how to stop it. Now Iâm working with someone⊠trying to take it down.â
Young-ilâs lips curled slightly. âIs that so?â
Gi-hun frowned, which seemed to make Young-il chuckle, much to his surprise. He leaned back in his seat, lifting both hands in mock surrender.
âSorry, Iâm not here to cause trouble. Just⊠I guess I needed someone to talk to. My wifeâs in the hospital.â
Gi-hun's suspicion softened slightly. âOh?â
Young-il nodded, eyes lowering. âSheâs seven months pregnant. Liver cirrhosis. Doctors say she might not survive the birth,â Young-il paused, then continued. âWe needed the money. Thatâs why I signed up. But I didnât make it past the first night. Coward, right?â
Gi-hun shook his head. âNo one who left that place is a coward.â
Young-ilâs smile returned, faint and thoughtful. âThanks.â
The silence that followed felt heavier than before. Then, Young-il pulled something from his pocket, which seemed to be a small, crisp invitation card, just like the ones given before the games.
âThereâs a new date, and I got two cards. I donât know why they gave me two.â
He slid one across the table to Gi-hun, who looked down at it, his heart thudding.Â
âI think they want us back,â Young-il said, his voice quieter now. âMaybe itâs a second chance. Or maybe something else.â
Gi-hun pocketed the card slowly. âWhy give me yours?â
Young-il shrugged. âI donât know, maybe you might want to think about it? Iâm not really sure. But given what youâve told me, maybe this could be your way in to⊠tear everything down.â
Gi-hunâs hand hovered in the air for a moment before he took the card and looked it over. It had the same symbols and format, like dĂ©jĂ vu written in ink.Â
The date was five days from now.Â
Young-il smiled faintly, rain dripping from his lashes. âThe games might be full of traps, but after seeing my wife again, I definitely need the money.â
Young-il turned, ready to walk away when Gi-hun called after him. âWait! What are you planning to do? Are you going back in again?â
Young-il glanced over his shoulder, the words leaving his mouth left Gi-hun in pure shock.
âSome of us never left.â
----
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Modern Warfare 2 - The Gulag
SAY IT LOUDER FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE BACKâą
previous chapter | MASTERLIST
ââ
The plan was set. The weight of it sat heavily on your shoulders as you checked your gear, strapping a handgun to your thigh holster and ensuring the spare magazines were secured. Your hands trembled slightly, but it wasnât from fear. It was the quiet, lingering uncertainty deep inside youâthe kind you couldn't afford to acknowledge right now. You felt In-hoâs presence before you even saw him.
âYouâre hesitating,â he said lowly, standing just beside you, his voice quiet enough that only you could hear.
Your fingers hovered over the strap of your vest before tightening it. âIâm not.â
His gaze flickered down to your stomach. It was subtle, but you knew him well enough to see the moment of hesitation in his normally calculating eyes. His hand clenched at his side, the leather of his gloves creaking slightly.
âYou donât have to be here,â he said finally.
You let out a short breath, tilting your head toward him with an almost bitter smile. âAnd do what? Hide while everyone else fights? Pretend none of this is happening?â
His jaw tightened. âYou have more to lose.â
Your heart clenched at those words, but before you could respond, Gi-hunâs voice cut through the tension.
âEveryone ready?â
The room shifted.
Hyun-ju was tightening the bandages on her wrist, tucking a blade into her boot. Jun-ho was checking his firearm, his expression unreadable as he stood near the doorway. No-eul adjusted the strap of her guard uniform, her fingers steady. Gyeong-seok exhaled through his nose, shifting his weight as he cracked his knuckles.
They were ready, and so were you.
But before you could step forward, In-ho caught your wrist. You froze as his gloved hand closed over your armânot in restraint, but in something gentler.Â
You turned to him. He didnât say anything at first. Instead, he reached down and pulled something from the inside of his coatâa sleek, customized handgun. He placed it in your palm, closing your fingers around it.
Then, for the first time in a long time, his eyes softened. âIâll protect you,â he murmured, voice quiet but firm. âNo matter what happens.â
The words were a promise. One that neither of you knew if he could keep. Your throat tightened, but you nodded. âWe protect each other.â
His lips pressed into a thin line. âStay close to me.â
Then, without another word, he released your wrist and turned to the others. The tension in the room shifted once more.
Gi-hun gave a sharp nod, rolling his shoulders back. âLetâs move.â
With that, the group stepped forward, the war ahead looming like a storm. The fight was coming and there was no turning back.
You moved as thoughts started to cloud your mind. You werenât sure when you lost yourself.
Maybe it was the moment you stepped into the games, out of sheer reckless curiosity, thinking you could outsmart something designed to break people.
Maybe it was when you ran for six months, evading shadows, haunted by memories of the bodies that had fallen around youânames you never knew, faces you would never forget.
Or maybe it was when you put on the mask. When you stood above the very system you once despised, playing the role of the overseer, whispering orders that made the machine turn, knowing that every command meant another life lost.
The moment you ascended to power, donned in black, speaking in commands that turned life and death into a cold transaction.
The mask was supposed to be just thatâa mask. A tool to hide behind. A way to survive. But at some point, you had begun to wonder if you had become the mask itself.
And now, here you were. Again.
But this time, you werenât running.
You were trying to end it.
Your fingers tightened around the edges of the table in front of you, knuckles turning white. The room was empty, save for the distant hum of the facilityâs systems and the echo of your own ragged breathing. Your body ached, exhaustion weighing down on you like chains, but the real war was inside your mind.
What if, after all of this, you werenât meant to be saved?
What if you had already become everything you once swore to destroy?
The thought sent a deep, twisting nausea through you.
You had spent so long convincing yourself that you werenât like the others. That you had control over your fate. That despite all the blood on your hands, you were still human. But were you?
If you were, why did the sight of death no longer make you flinch?
Why had you learned to speak in orders and sacrifices, calculating loss like it was just another variable in an equation?
You clenched your hands into fists, feeling your nails dig into your skin. You needed to hold onto something realâanything that reminded you that there was still something left of you beneath all of this.
And then you thought about the life inside you.
You placed a hesitant hand over your stomach, your heartbeat hammering against your ribs. You were carrying life in a place built to destroy it.
For a second, you almost laughed. How cruel, how ironic, that in the heart of this machine of death, something so fragileâso pureâwas growing inside of you.
Would they ever know the truth about you? About what you did?
Would they see you as someone worth saving, or would they only see the monster that history had made of you?
Your chest felt tight. You pressed a hand against it, as if that could steady the whirlwind inside you.
Was there anything left of you beneath the mask?
The door creaked open behind you. You didnât turn immediately.Â
You knew who it was.
In-ho stepped inside, his presence solid, grounding. He didnât say anything at first, only watching as you stared at the reflection in the dark glassâyour own face staring back at you, tired, fractured.
"Youâre overthinking again," he murmured, stepping closer.
You let out a bitter laugh. âAm I?â
There was silence, then something was softer. âWhat are you thinking about?â
You exhaled slowly. âThat I donât know who I am anymore.â
In-hoâs gaze darkened, but there was no judgment in his expression. Only understanding.
âI was a player,â you continued, voice quieter now. âThen I ran. Then I became an overseer. And now, Iâm here. Back where I started. Tearing it all down.â You turned to him, eyes searching his as if he had the answer. âSo tell me, In-ho. Who am I supposed to be?â
He didnât answer right away. Instead, he reached for your hand, gloved fingers closing over yours. His grip was steady. Warm.
"You are who you choose to be," he said finally. "And right now, youâve chosen to fight.â
Your throat tightened.
Fight.
You had fought for the past few months, hadnât you? For control. For survival. For something greater than yourself.
What if fighting only turned you into another cog in the machine?
What if you were too far gone to be anything else?
Slowly, In-ho lifted his other hand and rested it gently over yours, over where it still hovered against your stomach. His gaze was softer now, his touch careful, almost reverent.
âYou still have something to fight for,â he murmured.
For the first time in a long time, you felt fragile. Breakable. A lump formed in your throat, but you forced yourself to swallow it down.
Maybe there was no clear answer to who you were.
Maybe there never would be.
But right now, you knew one thing.
You werenât going to let this place define you anymore.
Slowly, you exhaled, steadying your hands. Then, with newfound clarity, you met In-hoâs gaze.
âLetâs finish this.â
And for the first time in a long time, you felt like you had control over your own story again.
ââ
The cold night air pressed against your skin as you and the others moved through the shadows of the island, weaving between steel walls and towering storage units. The moon hung overhead, half-veiled by storm clouds, casting eerie streaks of light over the empty pathways.
Jun-ho moved ahead, his camera clutched tightly in his hands. His fingers trembled slightlyânot from fear, but from adrenaline. Each click of the camera shutter echoed in the silence, capturing the horrors of the island one frame at a time.
âKeep moving,â In-ho whispered beside you, his voice barely above the wind. His presence was steady, a contrast to the chaos in your mind.
You adjusted your grip on your gun, scanning the area. Every flickering shadow, every distant noise, sent a wave of paranoia through your veins. This island was alive, breathing, waiting to swallow you whole.
You turned to Gi-hun, who was watching Jun-ho carefully. âHow much proof do you have so far?â
Jun-ho glanced down at his camera. âMore than enough to make sure the world never turns a blind eye again,â he murmured.
But was it enough to stop them? The organization had powerâmore than any of them had ever imagined. Even with evidence, they needed to make sure this wasnât just another buried story.
That meant one thing.
They needed to get out alive.
Hyun-ju let out a sharp breath. âWe canât just keep sneaking around. We need to hit them where it hurts.â
Gi-hun nodded. âThatâs why weâre heading to the control room.â
You swallowed. âThatâs the most dangerous place in this facility.â
Gyeong-seok, standing beside No-eul, flexed his fingers over his stolen rifle. âThen letâs make it count.â
There was no turning back now. You followed the group through the winding paths, past lifeless halls and silent corridors, deeper into the heart of the island. The closer you got, the heavier the air became.
Then, you saw it.
The control room.
A fortress of reinforced glass and steel, glowing with monitors displaying every part of the island. The pulse of the entire operation. If they could get in, they could override the system. Send the footage out. Tear down the organization from the inside.
But as you took another step forward, something felt wrong.
Too quiet.
Too easy.
Your instincts screamed just as the first shot rang out.
âAMBUSH!â
The world exploded. Gunfire erupted from above, from the sides, from the very walls themselves. Dozens of guards stormed in, masked and armed, their weapons aimed with deadly precision.
Your body moved before your mind could catch up. You dove behind a stack of metal crates as bullets shredded through the air, sparks flying from every surface.
Gi-hun fired back, his expression a mask of fury. Hyun-ju ducked behind a column, reloading as Gyeong-seok and No-eul tried to hold the right flank.
Jun-ho barely managed to shield his camera as a bullet shattered a light overhead, raining glass down on him.
You felt a hand on your wristâIn-ho, pulling you back as another round of bullets whizzed past where you had just stood.
âThey were waiting for us,â you gritted out, pressing yourself against the crate.
âThey knew we were coming,â In-ho muttered, eyes scanning for an opening.
A guard charged towards Jun-ho, gun raised. Before you could react, In-ho was already moving, raising his weapon and firing a clean shot. The guard collapsed, but another took his place, then another.
You turned, firing rapidly, each shot precise, controlled. Your months full of training, of surviving, had honed your skills into something deadly.
But the guards werenât just trying to kill you. They were herding you. Pushing you back. Forcing you into a trap.
âWe need a new plan!â Gi-hun shouted over the chaos.
You looked up. The control room doors were still sealed, reinforced. The only way in was through a direct overrideâor through the bodies standing in the way.
The choice was clear.
No turning back. No surrender.
You locked eyes with In-ho. âWe fight our way through,â you said.
His gaze flickered to your stomach, hesitation flashing through his expression for the briefest second. But he knew you wouldnât back down. âThen we do it together,â he murmured.
You nodded. Then, gripping your gun, you took a deep breath and ran straight into the fire.
Bullets shredded through the air as you sprinted forward, your heart hammering against your ribs. The floor beneath you trembled with each deafening blast. You moved purely on instinct, firing into the chaos, ducking and rolling behind a control panel as guards swarmed the entrance. The others were right behind you.
Gi-hun took cover behind an overturned console, his jaw clenched as he reloaded. Jun-ho was crouched near a metal pillar, his camera slung over his shoulder, his gun shaking slightly in his grip.
In-ho was beside you, his movements precise and ruthless. He fired clean, methodical shots, covering Hyun-ju as she darted to the other side of the room, her rifle slung over her shoulder. Gyeong-seok and No-eul worked in tandem, their stolen weapons spitting fire as they tried to clear a path forward.
But there were too many.
Guards poured in from the upper levels, rifles trained on your group like predators circling prey. You counted at least two dozen, their numbers closing in.
A bullet grazed your arm, the burn searing through your flesh. You clenched your jaw, shoving the pain aside. You couldnât afford to hesitate.
âWeâre getting pinned down!â No-eul shouted, ducking behind the cover as bullets ripped into the wall beside her.
âWe need to move, now!â Gyeong-seok gritted out, his breathing ragged.
In-ho scanned the control room, his sharp eyes locking onto something across the room. The main terminal. The heart of the facility.
âWe have to get to the override panel,â he said. âItâs our only chance to take control of the islandâs systems.â
âThen letâs make a path,â you said, gripping your gun tighter.
You and In-ho moved together, breaking from cover in perfect sync. Your weapons fired in unison, dropping two guards blocking the path to the panel. The others followed your lead, pushing forward with relentless force.
Hyun-ju threw a stolen flash grenade, the explosion of light and sound sending the remaining guards into disarray. âGo! Now!â she yelled.
In-ho grabbed your wrist, pulling you forward as you weaved through the chaos, your heartbeat pounding in your ears. You reached the main terminal, its screen glowing with layers of security protocols.
Jun-ho rushed in behind you, typing furiously on the control pad. âI can override the security feeds, but I need time!â
Time was the one thing you didnât have. Guards regrouped, their gunfire tearing into the walls. No-eul yelped as a bullet grazed her leg, Gyeong-seok dragging her back behind a desk for cover.
Gi-hun gritted his teeth, turning to you. âWe have to hold them off.â
You nodded, your body aching, but your mind razor-sharp. You lifted your gun and fired, refusing to let them take another step forward.
And then, a voice crackled through the speakers.
âYou really thought you could win?â
Everything stopped as your stomach twisted as the voice reverberated through the room. Cold. Amused. Unshaken by the battle raging inside the control center.
It was one of the overseers. Though its voice sounded from⊠a woman.
âYou think youâre exposing us? You have no idea what youâve done.â
The screens flickered, revealing a horrifying sight.
Outside the facility, massive cargo ships loomed on the horizon. Heavily armed. Reinforcements.
Jun-hoâs fingers froze over the keyboard. âThey knew we were coming.â
Your grip on your gun tightened. The weight of everythingâyour past, your choices, your unborn childâpressed down on you like a crushing force.
âWe canât stop now,â you said, your voice steely.
In-ho turned to you, something fierce and unyielding in his gaze. âI wonât let them take you.â
You swallowed hard, your hand instinctively resting on your stomach.
No one ran. No one surrendered.
The next battle had just begun.
Thick iron chains rattled against the damp ground as you and the others were dragged forward. The cold bite of steel dug into your wrists, the weight of captivity pressing down on you with every step. The guards flanked you in a tight formation, their rifles primed and ready to fire at the slightest resistance.
The sky was dark, storm clouds swirling like an omen above the endless stretch of ocean. Massive cargo ships loomed ahead, their floodlights cutting through the night, illuminating the dock where your fate awaited. The air reeked of salt, gunpowder, and something elseâsomething metallic and final.
A line of masked overseers stood at the edge of the dock, their robes billowing in the wind. Their presence alone was suffocating, a silent reminder of the power they wielded.
At the center stood one of them. A woman with a single black mask, wearing a red long dress that fit her shape. An unmistakable symbol of control. She was someone youâve never seen before, even In-ho seemed confused seeing her.
The overseer inched forward, exuding an aura of absolute dominance. The guards shoved you and the others to your knees, forcing you to look up at the figure towering above.
The overseerâs slow, deliberate applause echoed against the crashing waves.
âWell, well,â the voice purred, smooth and amused. âLook at you. The rebels. The revolutionaries.â A pause. Then, with venomous delight. âThe failures.â
A low growl rumbled from Gi-hunâs throat, his wrists straining against the chains. In-ho remained still, his gaze locked onto the overseer, his mind calculating every possible move. Your breath hitched, your pulse hammering at the base of your throat.
The overseer paced in front of you, slow and measured, relishing every second of your humiliation.
âDid you think you were the first?â Her voice was mocking, dripping with condescension. âDid you really believe you could âexposeâ us? That the world would shun us in horror?â
A bitter chuckle.
âOh, how naive.â
A monitor buzzed to life behind the line of overseers. The screen flickered, revealing something none of you had expected.
Millions of people were watching. The world wasnât horrified. They were entertained.
Live feeds, interviews, and even betting pools flashed across the screen. People werenât condemning the games. They were celebrating them.
Your stomach twisted violently.
The overseer gestured toward the display. âYou see, the world doesnât want justice. They want a spectacle. And thanks to you, dear rebels, weâve given them just that.â
Gi-hunâs fists clenched so tightly that his knuckles turned white. âYouâre lying.â
The overseer tilted her head. âAm I?â
The screen shifted again, showing news anchors praising the system, social media posts glorifying the brutality, commentators analyzing âstrategiesâ for future contestants.
âPeople have stopped questioning the morality of it all. Theyâve accepted it.â The overseerâs voice lowered to a chilling whisper. âThey want more.â
A sickening wave of nausea rolled over you.
The overseer crouched down, inches from your face. âAnd you,â she murmured, âwere always meant to be part of it.â
Your breath hitched as they lifted a gloved hand and traced it along your jawlineâthen lower, hovering just above your abdomen. Your blood ran cold.
âI must say,â the overseer drawled, âIâm impressed. Even after all the carnage, you still found time to create life.â
Your entire body stiffened. Beside you, In-hoâs head snapped up, his entire posture shifting from composed to sheer, unfiltered rage.
The overseerâs voice dropped to a lethal whisper. âI wonder⊠how much longer it will last?â
In-ho lunged as the chains snapped as he surged forward, a raw, animalistic fury igniting in his eyes. The guards reacted immediately, striking him across the face with the butt of a rifle. He hit the ground hard, a sharp crack echoing as blood splattered against the dirt.
You gasped, jerking forward, but the guards yanked you back, forcing you to watch as In-ho writhed, his chest heaving, his head bowed.
The overseer smirked. âHow predictable.â
In-ho lifted his head, a slow, dark smile curling at his lips despite the blood dripping down his chin. âYou have no idea whatâs coming.â
The overseer merely chuckled. âOh, but I do.â She straightened, dusting off their coat. âYou see, the three of youââ they gestured between you, In-ho, and Gi-hun ââwere always meant to be the pillars of this system. A former winner, a perfect enforcer, and a rogue overseer. The power of the games could have been yours.â
A pause.
âBut you chose defiance.â
She turned to Gi-hun, her expression unreadable behind the mask. âAnd you, my dear 456⊠you were never meant to win.â
Gi-hun inhaled sharply, his body going rigid.
The overseer took one last step closer, looming over you. âBut now, you get to witness something far more tragic.â She motioned toward the ships. âYour final chapter.â
Your pulse pounded in your ears as realization sank in. They werenât taking you to be executed. They were taking you to be displayed.
A grand finale for the world to see.
The guards yanked the chains, forcing all of you to your feet. Your legs trembled, but you forced yourself to stay strong. You couldnât afford to break. Not here. Not now.
You risked a glance at In-ho. His lip was split, his eye swelling, but his gaze was still burning with defiance. He met your eyes, a silent promise there.
I will not let them take you.
The storm overhead rumbled, the waves crashing violently against the dock as the guards led you closer to the ships. You swallowed back the fear clawing at your throat.
The waves roared beneath the docks, a monstrous force of nature that mirrored the chaos unraveling in your mind. The cold steel chains dug into your wrists as the guards tightened their grip, dragging you and the others toward the looming cargo ships. The world had already decided your fateâwhether as traitors, martyrs, or something far worse.
And then the overseer spoke again, her voice eerily calm against the storm.âYouâre still clinging to the idea that youâve uncovered the truth,â she mused, stepping forward with a measured grace. âThat youâve somehow managed to defy the system. But tell meâŠâ She tilted their head slightly, the smooth black mask reflecting the flickering floodlights. âDid you ever stop to think that perhaps⊠the system wanted you to?â
The words settled like a slow, creeping poison. Gi-hun stiffened beside you, his fists trembling within the chains. âWhat the hell are you talking about?â he snapped.
The overseer chuckled, the sound drenched in amusement. âYou really think all of thisââ she gestured at the massive ships, the live broadcasts, the relentless global fascination ââhappened because of you?â She let the silence hang for a moment before answering their own question.
Your stomach twisted.
âThisâall of thisâwas inevitable.â
The overseer began pacing in front of you like a predator toying with its wounded prey.
âViolence⊠spectacle⊠the illusion of rebellion. You see, the system never feared exposure.â She turned slightly, glancing at Jun-ho. âDid you think you were the first to attempt such a thing? To gather evidence? To infiltrate?â
Jun-hoâs breath hitched, his jaw tightening.
âMany have tried before,â the overseer continued smoothly. âSome died. Some disappeared. But their efforts all had one thing in common.â Her voice dropped to a taunting whisper. âThey never mattered.â
Your pulse pounded in your ears.
The overseer exhaled, her tone almost sympathetic. âWe never needed to hide the games. We only needed to⊠evolve them.â
Gi-hunâs expression darkened, fury twisting his features. âNo. Thatâs bullshitââ
âIs it?â The overseer took a slow, deliberate step forward. âYou saw the worldâs reaction. You saw the demand. You thought you were at the top, pulling the strings, but in reality, you were merely pieces on a much grander board. The real game isnât about survival or wealth. It never was.â Her gaze darkened, sharp with something unreadable. âItâs about control. Manipulation. How far people are willing to go when they believe they have power.â
The screen flickered behind them againâbroadcasts of talk shows, endless online discourse, governments debating regulations rather than condemnations.
âThe world isnât horrified. Itâs hungry.â
Gi-hun's expression hardened. âAnd what? You think people will just let this continue?â
The overseer chuckled, shaking her head. âLet it continue?â She gestured grandly. âThe world has already decided. The games were revealed, the public saw the truth, and what did they do?â
She leaned in closer, voice thick with amusement.
âThey begged for more.â
Your stomach twisted.
No. That wasnât possible.
The world should have been horrified. Outraged. The system should have collapsed under the weight of its own sins. A twisted smile played at the overseerâs lips, barely visible beneath the mask.
âThis was never about stopping the games.â
She turned their gaze onto you this time, her tone softening into something almost affectionate.
âThis was about creating something new.â
Your breath caught in your throat.
The overseer let the weight of her words sink in before continuing. âYou, In-ho, Gi-hun⊠you were never opponents to the system. You were components.â
Another pause. Then, another cruel smirk.
âYou were the experiment.â
The words shattered the last threads of certainty holding you together. The realization was crushing. The system hadnât been exposed to destroy it. It had been exposed to evolve.
And now, you, In-ho, and Gi-hunâthe supposed "leaders" of the systemâwere nothing but remnants of an old era. Pawns that had served their purpose.
Your knees nearly buckled beneath you. âWhatâŠ?â Your voice barely registered, hollow, strangled.
âDid you really believe you infiltrated us? That you and In-hoâs power struggle meant anything? That Gi-hunâs rebellion made an impact?â The overseerâs head tilted, amused. âNo. You were all carefully placed pieces on the board. Given just enough power. Just enough hope.â
She gestured between you and In-ho. âThe overseer who once enforced the system, turned against it. The rogue infiltrator seeking to burn it down.â Her gaze slid to Gi-hun. âAnd the man who tried to end it, only to be drawn back into its orbit again and again.â
A bitter laugh escaped her lips.
âAll of you⊠designed to stir the pot. To give the world something new to fixate on.â
It was like the ground beneath you had crumbled. Jun-hoâs breathing was uneven now, his fingers twitching as if resisting the urge to lunge at the overseer despite his chains. Gi-hun was eerily silent, his entire body rigid with unprocessed rage.
You turned to In-ho, desperate for some kind of answer, some kind of denialâanything. But his face was unreadable. You couldnât find anything. Even he didnât know what to do anymore.Â
The overseer took a slow step forward, her voice dropping to something almost gentle. âThe real games never ended.â She leaned in closer. âBecause they never truly began.â
A cold, sickening dread settled deep in your bones. Everything you had done. Everything you had fought for. It wasnât against the system.
It had been for it all along.
A deafening silence consumed the dock, broken only by the distant wails of the ocean and the mechanical hum of the ships. Your mind was still reeling from the overseerâs words, from the realization that the very thing you fought against had been orchestrating your every move.
You were never tearing the system down.
You were fueling it.
The chains rattled against your wrists as you struggled to breathe, your pulse hammering so loud you could barely hear the distant screams of the world that now knew the truthâbut was unwilling to stop it.
And then the overseer moved slowly and deliberately. The gun in her hand was raised, the barrel leveled directly at your head. A cruel smirk tugged at the edges of her lips beneath the mask. âI think we all know how this ends. But I have to say,â she mused, her eyes flickering down to your stomach, âthis was an interesting variable.â
The guards beside you tightened their grip. No one in your group dared to move, frozen in place like ghosts waiting to vanish into oblivion.
âNo.â
The word came from beside you, raw and desperate.
In-ho took a step forward, yanking against the chains holding him back. His breath came in ragged gasps, his body tense, as if ready to tear through every restraint between him and the gun aimed at you.
âYou donât have to do this,â he said, his voice tight with barely contained emotion.Â
The overseer didnât even glance at him. She took a slow step forward, locking eyes with In-ho. âBut you, In-hoâŠtell me, how does it feel? To know you fought so hard to surviveâonly to end up right back in chains?â
In-ho said nothing. You could feel the tension radiating off him, his fists clenched so tightly they trembled.
The overseer took another step closer, voice turning into a whisper. âDoes it hurt more knowing that sheâll suffer with you?â
Something inside of In-ho snapped. With a roar, he lunged. The guards reacted instantly, yanking him back before he could reach the overseer. A sharp crack echoed as a rifle butt smashed into In-hoâs gut, sending him to his knees.
âNo!â You struggled against your restraints, but the chains dug into your wrists, holding you back.
In-ho coughed, blood dripping from the corner of his mouth. He lifted his head slowly, glaring up at the overseer, pure hatred burning in his gaze. But the overseer only chuckled, looking amused.
âNo,â In-ho hissed, his eyes burning with something unrecognizableâsomething vulnerable, something stripped bare. âSheâsheâs pregnant.â
The words barely made it past his lips, but they hit like a gunshot. The world seemed to stop. The others visibly stiffened, the revelation settling into their bones like a slow, creeping cold.
Gi-hun turned sharply toward you, his brows furrowing, his lips parting in silent realization. Jun-hoâs expression shattered for just a second before he quickly masked it, his gaze flicking between you and his brother. Hyun-ju inhaled sharply. Gyeong-seok muttered a quiet curse under his breath. No-eulâs hands twitched at her sides.
And the overseer laughed.
It was quiet at firstâa small chuckle, almost amused. Then it grew.
Louder.
Hollow.
Merciless.
âHow poetic,â she tilted their head. âA life growing inside the very person who helped enforce the deaths of so many.â
In-hoâs breathing was ragged. âItâs unfair,â he rasped. âThe child⊠our child⊠they never chose this.â
For a fraction of a second, the overseer seemed to consider his words. Then, her smirk deepened.
âYouâre right.â
Then, without warning, the gun was pulled away. Instead of relief, a cold wave of dread washed over you. The overseer turned slightly, pacing in front of your group, her gaze flickering between you, Gi-hun, and In-ho.
âBut fairness was never a part of this game.â
The next words came like a slow death sentence.
âChoose.â
The wind howled as the reality of their command settled over the group.
âYou,â the overseer gestured at you. âOr him.â They pointed at In-ho. âOne of you dies here, the other gets to live⊠for now.â
Gi-hun stepped forward instantly. âThis isnât a choice.â His voice was sharp, cutting through the thick air like a blade. âItâs a sick joke.â
The overseer barely acknowledged him. Jun-hoâs eyes flickered toward his brother, then to you. He was calculating, searching for a way out.
The chains around your wrists felt tighter. The child inside you was an anchor, holding you down, keeping you from thinking straight.
In-ho's voice was barely above a whisper. âTake me.â
âNo,â you said immediately, shaking your head.
In-hoâs eyes met yours, and in them, you saw it. The exhaustion. The torment. The weight of everything heâd done. But before you could say another word, the overseer let out a short laugh.Â
âTouching,â she mused, before tilting their head toward the guards. âIâm getting too impatient. Kill them both.â
The world moved too fast and too slow all at once.
The gunshot rang out like a crack through the fabric of the world.
âY/N!â In-ho cried out, breaking away from the chains as he rushed to you.Â
Your body jerked. At first, it didnât register. Just a strange, searing heat blooming somewhere deep inside you, like a fire spreading through your veins. The force of the impact sent you stumbling, the air knocked from your lungs as if someone had just punched a hole through your chest.
Then, the pain came.
A slow, creeping agony at firstâlike the burn of a blade pressing into fleshâbefore it exploded into something unbearable. It stole the breath from your throat, the strength from your limbs. Your knees buckled. You barely felt yourself falling.
But In-ho was there.
His hands were on you before you hit the ground, catching you, his grip desperateâtoo desperate. He pulled you against him, his voice breaking into fragments of sound, of syllables that you couldnât quite grasp.
âStay with me,â he whispered, his voice raw. âJustâjust keep your eyes on me.â
You tried. God, you tried. But the world was slipping, bleeding into shadows. âIn-hoâŠâ Your voice was barely a breath. âWe were just kids,â you murmured, your fingers barely brushing his wrist. âDo you remember? When we used to sneak onto the rooftops? Just to watch the city lights?â
His throat bobbed as he swallowed hard. âYeah,â he rasped. âYou said they looked like stars. That if we couldnât reach the real ones, we could pretend.â
You gave a faint smile, though it barely stayed. âAnd youââ a cough wracked through you, and his hand cradled your cheek instinctively, as if afraid youâd disappear right in front of him. âYou always brought the stolen snacks. Said weâd never go hungry if we stuck together.â
His breath hitched. âAnd we didnât. Not once.â
A silence stretched between you bothâlong enough for him to realize how cold you were getting. His hold tightened.
âWe were supposed to make it out together,â he whispered, his voice breaking.
You let out a shaky breath. âAnd yet⊠here we are.â
His jaw clenched. The weight of everythingâhis choices, your choicesâsettled heavily between you. He had spent years chasing power, believing it was the only way to survive. But in the end, it had led to this.
Your fingers barely curled around his wrist. âDo you⊠ever wonder?â
He blinked, leaning closer. âWonder what?â
âIf things were different,â you murmured. âIf we were never part of the gamesâŠâ You swallowed, your throat dry. âWould we have been happy?â
His face crumpled, something deep and painful surfacing in his eyes.
âIn-ho,â you whispered. âWhat if⊠what if we raised our child together?â
His breath caught. For the first time, the war around you faded. The guards, the overseers, the bloodshedâit all became distant noise.
âI wouldâve kept you safe,â he said, his voice thick. âBoth of you.â
Your lips parted, a shuddering exhale escaping.
He wasnât lying.
Despite everything, despite the monster he had become to survive, there was still the boy who had once promised to never let you starve. The boy who had watched city lights with you and told you the world could be yours.
âIn another life,â you whispered, tears slipping past your lashes, âI think we wouldâve been happy.â
His grip on you trembled. âThen letâs make this one count,â he said fiercely.
But you knewâboth of you knewâthere was no escaping this ending. And yet, for just one fleeting moment, you both allowed yourselves to pretend.
The moment In-hoâs trembling hand pressed against your belly, a choked sob tore from his throat. His palm was warm, despite the coldness creeping into your body, despite the chaos around you. His tears fell freely now, mixing with the blood that pooled beneath you both. His forehead rested against yours, his breath uneven, shaky, desperate.
"You were supposed to live," he whispered, voice barely audible over the ringing in your ears. "Both of you."
Your fingers weakly lifted, wanting to touch him, to reassure him, to tell him that it was okayâeven though it wasnât. But before you could reach himâ
Bang.
His body jolted violently. A sharp, shuddering gasp left him, his grip on you tightening as if he could still shield you from the inevitable.
Your vision blurred, but you felt it. The way his muscles tensed, the way his breath stilled for a split second before leaving him in a broken, rattling exhale.
Your lips parted, but no words came out. Just raw, silent agony.
But he didn't let go. Even as his body trembled, even as the warmth began to seep out of him, he held you. Tightly. Desperately.
His head dipped forward, his lips barely brushing your temple.
In-ho's grip on you slackened slightly, his forehead pressing weakly against yours as his breath came in shallow, ragged gasps. The warmth of his body was still there, but it was fadingâjust like yours.
You forced yourself to lift a trembling hand, brushing against his jaw, smearing blood across his skin. His own hand covered yours instantly, holding it in place, as if anchoring himself to you. His body trembled, whether from pain or grief, you werenât sure.
"Iâm sorry," he rasped, his voice cracking under the weight of emotions he had buried for so long. His other hand stayed firmly over your belly, shaking with the realization of what was slipping away. "I was supposed to protect you. I was supposed toââ
A wet cough interrupted his words, his body shuddering as another wave of pain struck him. But still, he clung to you.Â
You swallowed back the lump in your throat, blinking away the tears clouding your vision. "We... we had so many plans, In-ho," you murmured, a weak smile tugging at your lips despite the pain. "Remember? That little house by the coast... waking up to the sound of the waves... raising our child somewhere safe... away from all of this."
A broken chuckle left him, but it sounded more like a sob. "Yeah... I remember."Â
His fingers brushed against your cheek, gentle despite the blood staining them. "You always wanted a garden."
You let out a breathy laugh, though it hurt. "And you said youâd build the fence yourself, even though youâre terrible at carpentry."
His lips twitched in something close to a smirk. "I wouldâve figured it out eventually."
Silence hung between you for a moment, filled only by your labored breaths. The world around you had blurred, the distant chaos nothing more than background noise now.
You stared at him, memorizing his face, the way his dark eyes held a depth of emotions he had always tried to hide. And despite everythingâthe pain, the blood, the inevitability of it allâyou still found solace in him.
You wished you could turn back time, rewrite the ending, give your child a life beyond this place. But there were no second chances.
Another gun cocked in the distance. Footsteps approached, seemingly cold, heavy, and unforgiving. In-ho's body tensed, his arms instinctively pulling you closer. Even now, even with his strength waning, he was still trying to shield you.
You tried to hold him, to keep him upright, but your strength was gone. Your fingers, sticky with bloodâhis bloodâclutched at the fabric of his uniform, desperately trying to ground him, to keep him here with you.
His breaths came in uneven, shallow bursts, his body twitching against yours as he struggled to fight against the inevitable. His grip on your waist weakened, but his hand on your stomach never wavered, as if it was the only thing tethering him to life.
"In-ho," you rasped, your forehead pressing against his, trying to keep him with you, trying to will his body to stay alive despite the fatal wound tearing through him.
His lips parted, breath ragged and wet. His fingers twitched against your cheek before they cupped the side of your face in a weak attempt to comfort you. His dark eyes, once so intense, now held something softerâsomething desperate.
A sob broke from your throat as you held him tighter, ignoring the way your own body was beginning to weaken. Blood pooled beneath the both of you, the warmth of it contrasting cruelly against the chilling night air. You looked up and saw the overseer, standing there, watching the two of you, gun still raised. Her mask gave away nothing, but her stance was relaxed as if she knew the fight was already over.
"This was always how it was meant to end," the overseer murmured, her voice laced with cold amusement. "Did you really think you could change the system?"
In-ho shifted slightly, his fingers twitching against your belly again. His body was shaking, struggling to keep himself upright, but his eyesâdespite the agonyâstill burned with defiance. "Youâll never win," he rasped.
The overseer chuckled, low and knowing. "You still donât get it, do you?" She took a slow step closer, the muzzle of her gun lowering slightly. "There is no winning. There is no escaping." Her head tilted slightly, gaze flickering to you, her tone mocking. "You of all people should know that."
Your vision blurred, not just from the pain, but from the weight of everything. She was right. You knew it the moment you stepped back onto this island.Â
And yet, despite everything, despite the certainty of death hanging over you, you still reached for In-ho.
Still clung to the last warmth between you.
Still wished, in another life, you could have had more time.
A heavy silence fell over the bloodstained ground. The sea air, once brimming with the scent of salt, now reeked of gunpowder and iron. Your body, weakened and barely clinging to consciousness, trembled in In-hoâs embrace. His grip was still firm despite the life draining from him, his forehead pressed against yours, his breath warm but fading.
Then, through the blur of pain and dimming vision, you saw them.
Gi-hun. Jun-ho. No-eul. Hyun-ju. Gyeong-seok.
They stood frozen at the edge of the platform, their faces carved with horror. Jun-hoâs eyes were the widest, wild with anguish. His lips moved, screaming somethingâyour name, In-hoâs nameâbut his cries were muffled by the roaring in your ears. A guard yanked him back roughly, restraining him as he thrashed, desperation twisting his features.
Gi-hun's fists clenched at his sides, his expression unreadable, but his eyesâthose sharp, battle-worn eyesâwere filled with something between sorrow and fury. No-eul and Gyeong-seok looked pale, tense, their bodies rigid with helplessness, and Hyun-juâalways so composedâhad a rare moment of raw emotion flicker across her face.
The overseer stepped forward, her heels stopping just before the pooling blood beneath you and In-ho. Her presence loomed over all of you like a specter, and when she spoke, her voice carried an eerie finality.
"Let this be a reminder," she mused, slow and deliberate, her gaze shifting between the remaining survivors. "A lesson for those who think they can escape fate."
Jun-ho struggled again, his entire body shaking. âYou bastard!â he screamed, his voice cracking. âYou fucking cowardâlet them go! Let them go!â
The overseer merely chuckled, tilting her head slightly, amusement lacing her words. "Oh, Jun-ho," she sighed, stepping back into the shadows. "You still donât understand, do you?" She gestured toward the island, toward the monolithic structures that loomed under the stormy sky. "You came here thinking you could end the games. You thought you could take it all down." She let the words linger before her voice dropped into something more menacing.
"But once you go inâthereâs no turning back."
A new alarm blared across the island. The guards yanked Jun-ho, Gi-hun, and the others away, dragging them further back into the compound. Their muffled shouts became part of the chaos, swallowed by the unrelenting storm of fate.
As darkness pulled you further into its embrace, the last thing you saw was In-hoâs bloodied face, his eyes barely open, his lips trying to form words he no longer had the strength to say.
ââ
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A/N: Now, it's done! Can't believe I've ended this series already. Also, I broke my own heart while writing this epilogue, but I really do think that the actual show will have a sad ending for In-ho. I can't wait for the next season of Squid Game, and maybe I'll write another series based on the 3rd season đ Also, thank you so much to all of you for reading and bearing my writing of this series! Your comments and feedbacks really helped and motivated me to continue writing. You can check out my masterlist to see more of my oneshots and my upcoming series soon. You may also request oneshots so please feel free to do so. đ«¶
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