"You're not a safety pin," she told him, her voice like velvet and gravel. "You’re a bomb waiting to go off."
In the end, the three of them didn't find a "happily ever after" that was perfect. They found one that was real. They piled into a camper van, driving away from the castle, realizing that while it’s okay to not be okay, it’s even better to be together. "You're not a safety pin," she told him,
Moon Kang-tae lived his life in the shadows of a ghost. As a caregiver in psychiatric wards, he moved from town to town every time the "butterflies" returned in his older brother Sang-tae’s nightmares. Sang-tae, who was on the autism spectrum, had witnessed their mother’s murder years ago, and the trauma had tethered the two brothers to a cycle of running and hiding. Kang-tae was the anchor—sturdy, patient, and utterly hollow inside. He had learned to suppress every desire, smile through every insult, and exist only as a shield for his brother. Then came Ko Moon-young. They piled into a camper van, driving away