…And they each walk past without stopping. He stops short at the sight of her, and they brace themselves and walk towards each other… She stops at the dreamcatcher store for one last look, which is exactly where Tan is headed on his zombie walk through town. She tells him that she won’t see him anymore as promised, but there’s nothing the chairman can do to stop her from liking Tan. What, is she going to taint it by uttering it with her drugstore-chapsticked lips? Good grief.Įun-sang promises to repay the debts that Chairman Dad covered in her own time, but doesn’t apologize for liking Tan: “because that’s not wrong.” Good for you. Eep.Ĭhairman Dad accuses her of taking his money and then overstepping her bounds, feeling so high and mighty about it that he doesn’t even want her saying Tan’s name. Mom tells him Eun-sang went to Seoul to wrap up some paperwork at school, but in reality she’s sitting in a room with Chairman Dad. But as soon as he says it out loud, he gets this sheepish smile on his face that he can’t hide. Mom asks if he’s good friends with Eun-sang, and he admits shyly that he likes her. It’s pretty heartbreaking, and a scene like this makes me wish Young-do had been written this sympathetically from the start. She makes him food, which is probably the first home-cooked meal Young-do has had since he was a child, and he chokes back tears as he takes a bite. She turns him away at first, but decides he’s probably harmless (if only you knew) and invites him inside. There’s no sign of her, but just as he turns to go, he recognizes Mom, who remembers him too. Young-do goes down to Eun-sang’s house for a visit…stalk…visit-stalk. He knows it won’t solve anything, but suggests that he should just go see Eun-sang or bring her here if he misses her that much, thinking it’ll at least lessen his suffering. Hyo-shin sighs to see Tan so troubled, and jokes that wearing his pain on his face is a little clichéd. Tan sits up with a start as he watches every last picture and message disappear from the account before his very eyes. The stream of messages back and forth between Tan and Eun-sang both posing as Eun-sang confuse her, because she’s delightfully simple like that.Įun-sang sits at work staring at the same posts, and takes one last lingering look before deleting them. Won just needles right back: “Looks like he doesn’t have any friends either.” He tells Young-do to put some ointment on his wounds, and heads upstairs.īo-na gets upset when she realizes Chan-young is staring at Eun-sang’s posts online, hoping for a clue on her whereabouts. Young-do says he did the hitting and sighs that he forgot that he shouldn’t hit kids with hyungs. When Won returns to the hotel, he runs into Young-do wearing a matching bloody lip, and stops him to ask if he’s the one who fought with Tan. Please, save me hyung.” He breaks down, and Won is taken aback by his desperate tears. Tan finally asks when he’ll get sent to America. He tries to order Tan to go to the hospital, which is sweet, but just gets met with more deadened stares. Won comes up to his room to try and talk some sense into him, with reminders that no amount of kicking his feet will change the way their household goes ’round. The fact that you thought they were before is disturbing. Tan trudges home to a shocked Madam Han and Won, and an annoyed Chairman Dad who shouts after him that his antics aren’t cute anymore. Tan admits he can’t do it anymore, and Young-do just leaves him there to wallow a little more in his own self-loathing. I do admit I see things from Young-do’s point of view in this conversation, because Tan made this mess and is now the one crying about it. Oh are you done playing with that toy now? Young-do fumes: “Do you wanna die?” He challenges Tan’s right to rebel now, after what’s happened to Eun-sang because of him. We return in the midst of Tan’s meltdown, as he lies bloody and bruised in the street and tells Young-do he can take Eun-sang now. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. Park Shin-hye) – “넌 이별 난 아직 (Goodbye For You Not For Me)” Īudio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Let’s just hope they don’t get run out of town first. But in better news, when Tyrannical Daddy digs his heels in further, it actually spurs the people around him to make some changes. Our couple spends a lot of energy in being apart-but-together and together-but-apart, and I can’t even tell you which is worse. 383 DecemJanuHeirs: Episode 18 by girlfridayīreaking up is hard to do, especially when you’re not really broken up.