Kim Yooyeon who wakes up after an accident, with memories fragmented she relies on everyone to fill the in-between.
Kim Yooyeon sat upright in the hospital bed, the sterile scent of disinfectant clinging to the air. It no longer unsettled her the way it once did. She had been here long enough to adjust—to wake up every morning knowing she had lost her memories, knowing that her only grasp on the past came from what others told her.
And what they told her was this:
She was married. She was deeply in love. And her husband, who had been abroad for work, had been devastated when he heard about the accident, even more when he couldn’t return immediately. Today—the day of her discharge—she would finally go home.
Her parents had been with her since the beginning, threading her past together with their words. Their voices were steady, unwavering—as if the truth could be spoken into existence.
“You and your husband were so perfect together,” her mother gushed, her voice thick with emotion. “Always looking at each other like you were the only two people in the world.”
Yooyeon held onto the words, testing them, trying to find something familiar in them.
A flicker of memory surfaced. A formal dinner, the gentle clink of wine glasses, a man’s hand resting on the small of her back as they smiled for photographs. She could almost hear the laughter, but it felt distant, muted—like a scene from someone else’s life.
Her father nodded approvingly. “He’s a good man. Responsible, capable. And devoted to you, as any husband should be.”
Another fragment—her husband adjusting his tie in their shared bathroom mirror, his reflection catching hers. A quiet familiarity between them, practiced and smooth. She remembered feeling something then—a warmth in her chest, steady and certain.
“You don’t remember?” her mother asked hopefully.
Yooyeon hesitated. Did she? The images were there, but they felt too crisp, too clean—like a story well-told, not a memory truly lived.
“I… I think I do. Little pieces.”
Her mother brightened immediately. “See? It’s coming back! I always said true love leaves its mark on the soul, even if the mind forgets.”
The words settled over her like a soft weight. True love.
With each story they shared, more pieces seemed to surface. Their first dance at a business gala. Weekend brunches with friends where they finished each other’s sentences. Vacation photos where they looked blissfully happy.
Each memory felt genuine— yet the edges of them blurred, like an oil painting smudged by an impatient hand.
She wanted to believe it. She wanted to be the woman they spoke of, the one who had been so deeply in love.
But wasn’t love supposed to feel more certain than this?
The nurse entered with her discharge papers. “Mrs. Kim, you’re all set to leave. Your husband must be relieved—his wife is finally getting discharged.”
His wife.
The words settled into the quiet room, lingering in the air longer than they should have.
She had heard it before— “your husband,” “your loving marriage,” “you were so happy together.” Each time, the words had been spoken with certainty, as if they alone could fill the void in her memory.
But this felt different. Final. Binding.
Her fingers curled around the ring on her left hand. The metal was warm, familiar. She traced its shape, searching for something—anything—that felt like certainty.
She waited for the rush of emotion, the deep-seated knowing. It didn’t come.
Her mother squeezed her hand. “Your husband called while you were resting. He’ll be returning from his work trip this week.”
Yooyeon nodded, ignoring the flutter of something in her chest. Excitement? Anxiety? Or something else entirely?
As the elevator descended to the hospital lobby, her parents chatting excitedly beside her, Yooyeon let herself lean into the stories, into the warmth they promised.
If she reached for the love they spoke of, if she believed hard enough— would it become real?
Today, she was going home.
To them.
And maybe, just maybe, to the love she was supposed to remember.
You step into the familiar quiet of your home, and for a moment, it doesn’t feel real.
This place—this moment—was never supposed to happen like this.
You were supposed to come back with a clearer mind, with the weight of your feelings for Yooyeon finally worn down by distance and time. You had convinced yourself that being away, that drowning in work, was the right thing. You had nearly succeeded in quieting the ache of wanting her—of wanting something you were never meant to have.
But then the call came.
The accident. The words you never expected to hear. That she had lost her memories, that she couldn’t remember you.
And suddenly, the distance that was supposed to help you move on became unbearable.
You couldn’t leave. Couldn’t abandon your work, not when this deal had been months in the making. But you couldn’t call her either. You weren’t ready to hear her voice, to confirm with your own ears that she didn’t remember you. Instead, you asked about her indirectly—through doctors, through her parents. Keeping yourself just close enough to know she was okay, but far enough to not face the truth.
Now, you’re home. And for the first time since you left, you can’t avoid her anymore.
She’s in the living room when you step in, arranging flowers—an image so delicate, so carefully composed, that it stops you in your tracks. You never remembered her paying so much attention to things like this before.
“Welcome home,” she says, offering you a small smile. It’s polite, warm even, but there’s something unfamiliar about it. It’s measured, like she’s giving you exactly what she thinks you expect.
It throws you off.
She’s different, and yet—she’s not. She’s not an entirely new person, not a stranger. She’s still Yooyeon, but softened in ways she never was before. Less guarded, less sharp. And it terrifies you how easily she could slip into the version of her you used to dream about—the version that could have loved you back.
You clear your throat, setting down your luggage. “I’m sorry I couldn’t get back sooner.”
Her fingers still briefly over the petals. “It’s fine… they told me your trip was important.” Her voice is light, but there’s something beneath it. A hesitation. A quiet disappointment.
Then, softer, almost to herself, “We could’ve at least talked on the phone.”
Your chest tightens. You don’t know if she’s saying it because she wanted to talk to you or because she thinks it’s something she should say.
“How have you been?” you ask, even though you already know. You know what the doctors have said, what her parents have told you. But you need to hear it from her.
She launches into a recounting of her recovery—how she’s been adjusting, how her parents have practically hovered over her. But as she speaks, something feels off. Her words are careful, almost rehearsed, as if she’s reading from a script someone gave her.
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