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Heart to Heart: Episode 13

Hong-do discovers the secret of her past, and spends this entire episode trying to run from it. But no matter how much she may want to, she can’t hide from the truth. She can’t hide from Yi-seok either, as he refuses to let his world crash down around him without an explanation. Sadly, the explanation won’t be much consolation for either of them.

EPISODE 13 RECAP

We go back to the children’s hide-and-seek game in the field, and this time we follow the twin boys as they enter the shed to hide. The older twin instructs his younger brother to help him hide in a metal drum barrel, and the younger brother piles junk on top to make double-sure the little girl won’t look in there. With a kick to the barrel hiding his bossy brother, the younger twin makes himself comfortable with a book in a pile of hay outside.

Back in the present, Yi-seok surprises Hong-do with a late-night visit and tells her he’s run away from home. Shocked, Hong-do can only weakly protest as Yi-seok carries his things inside and delights in his first look at her home. He marvels at her garden and attic, and skirts her questions about what happened with his family. She tells him to go home after dinner and deal with things, but he refuses and says he’s staying forever.

Butler Ahn reports on Yi-seok’s whereabouts to Chairman Go, who’s decided that he’s going to send Hong-do abroad to avoid all this negativity. Ahn counters that he tried that once before twenty-three years ago and she came back, so maybe it’s time to confront the issue and let Hong-do and Yi-seok make their own decision. Smart man — I knew I liked him.

Hong-do worries about Yi-seok’s family and wonders why he didn’t at least go to his own apartment, but he’s in no mood to be serious and just wonders out loud what the two of them could possibly find to do all night long. He declares himself suddenly very tired and plunks himself down in Hong-do’s bed, patting the blanket for her to join him. Hee, so cute.

Hong-do grabs some blankets to make a bed in the other room, but Yi-seok says they may as well practice now since they’ll be living together eventually, and gently wrestles her to the bed (and I notice that Hong-do doesn’t protest much). With sweet kisses, a whispered “I love you,” and an order to her pet fish to look away, Yi-seok convinces shy Hong-do to stay with him.

She wakes in the morning to find her breakfast laid out and Yi-seok dismantling her excessive door locks. She takes a call from his mother (Yi-seok is so adorably jealous until she tells him it’s a woman calling), who invites her to meet and asks her not to tell Yi-seok. He gets her to tell him her door code, and she convinces him to go on to work without her by feigning tiredness.

Hong-do meets Yi-seok’s mother in a coffee shop, and Mom immediately starts accusing Hong-do of taking her sons away. Wasn’t one enough for her — now she wants the other one too? Hong-do is understandably confused because Mom is raving, threatening to tear her apart and calling her “Cha Young-ji.” She tells Hong-do point-blank that she killed Yi-seok’s brother, Il-seok, and Hong-do runs home in a frenzy, desperate to find anything to explain Yi-seok’s mother’s wild accusations.

She digs through her grandmother’s old things and finds papers proving that her grandmother once worked for the Go family. With shaking hands she looks through photographs from when she was a child, and finds the same picture that Butler Ahn found, of herself and her grandmother with Yi-seok and his brother. It triggers an old memory of the hide-and-seek game, and the accidental fire. In shock, Hong-do can only cry, “It can’t be… It can’t be…”

Yi-seok’s mother confesses to Chairman Go that she met with Hong-do and told her about the fire. Irrationally, she declares that even if she doesn’t remember, Hong-do committed a crime and must pay for it. Chairman Go points out that now Yi-seok will find out, which apparently never occurred to Mom, and he asks what she intends to do when that happens.

Se-ro struggles on the set of her drama, though she tries to stay positive as the director complains that she’s a terrible actress after all. She texts Doo-soo to buy her a cup of coffee at the station, where she tells him sadly that she ruined her scene today. She asks him to take her out for drinks, and when he turns her down because he’s working overtime, she sighs that this happens so often it doesn’t even hurt her feelings anymore, though clearly it does.

Yi-seok goes home to see his mother who’s taken to her bed again, and Butler Ahn stops him to warn him that his grandfather is planning to send Hong-do out of the country. Yi-seok visits Mom who begs him to stay with her, and she grabs his hand every time he thinks she’s sleeping and tries to slip away. In a semi-sedated daze, Mom tells him that she met with Hong-do today and that if she shows her face around here again, she’s not even human.

But Hong-do is in even worse shape as she sits alone, surrounded by old photos and assaulted by her emerging memories of that horrible day. She remembers the aftermath, when Yi-seok had stood stonily with his parents near the smoking skeleton of the shed. Hong-do’s grandmother had ushered her away, and the last thing she remembers is Yi-seok’s mother clutching her surviving son, and the accusing look on young Yi-seok’s face.

Lying on the floor, Hong-do begs her grandmother to say something — to say whether it really was her that did such a terrible thing. Yi-seok tries to call her, still trapped by his mother’s needy grip, but she’s too shocked to answer. He tries one last time to leave his mother and go see to Hong-do, but Mom grabs his sleeve and says that if he goes, she’ll die.

Doo-soo drives Se-ro home, and she tells him about how she was sent to the States when she was only ten years old. She goes on about how she was bullied at first but eventually became popular, and for the first time Doo-soo doesn’t look annoyed at her chatter. He interrupts her to put his coat over her exposed legs (he’s such a prude, this guy) but actually smiles at her silly stories.

Se-ro sighs that she wasn’t done talking when they pull up to her house, and admits that she doesn’t have any friends other than Yi-seok. She warns Doo-soo that she didn’t approach him with friendship in mind and warns him not to get any ideas like offering to be her friend. She offers to clean his coat for him, and it’s cute how he seems really concerned that she might think he’s dirty or something. He doesn’t seem particularly eager to leave either, which Se-ro notes with a grin.

In the morning, Chairman Go calls for Butler Ahn and is shocked when Housekeeper Geum-shim answers instead, as if she never left. She finds his favorite undies for him and fusses at him for wetting himself (“It’s not urine, it’s barley tea!”) and for letting himself get conned by that Madam Oh. They already act, and fight, like an old married couple.

Worried about Hong-do, Doo-soo remembers going to her place the night before and overhearing her landlord saying that she wants that weird girl Hong-do out. He’d approached, and she’d asked him why she never sees Hong-do anymore. He goes back to her place and becomes frantic when she won’t answer the door, and kicks his way in. Finding her senseless on the floor, he carries her to the hospital.

In the morning, Yi-seok manages to pry himself free of Mom’s grip and goes to find Hong-do. His father pulls Butler Ahn aside and instructs him to move his bed to Yi-seok’s mom’s room, but to lie that he didn’t tell him to do it, which is just so sleazy. Ahn asks him if he knows about Yi-seok’s girlfriend, informing him of who she really is and saying that Yi-seok doesn’t know yet.

Yi-seok is alarmed by Hong-do’s broken-down door and takes a call from Butler Ahn, angry and assuming they’ve sent her out of the country already. Ahn and the chairman correctly deduce that Hong-do figured everything out and can’t face Yi-seok, and the chairman figures he may have some things to set straight and asks Ahn to find her.

She’s at the hospital, where Doo-soo tells her she’s suffering from exhaustion. Hong-do is unresponsive until Doo-soo starts to call Yi-seok, when she begs him desperately not to ever, ever call him. She manages to stammer out, “I… I… his brother… I killed him,” leaving Doo-soo wondering what to do.

Yi-seok shows up at the mansion to confirm in person that Butler Ahn and his grandfather haven’t sent Hong-do away, but his mother stops him when he tries to go upstairs. She asks if he’s seen Hong-do, and he asks why she hates Hong-do so much. He wonders what his mom said to her, and what she meant by Hong-do not being human.

Mom grows desperate, begging Yi-seok to promise never to see Hong-do again, and in exchange she’ll approve whatever girl he brings home from now on. Yi-seok still thinks this is about Hong-do being a poor orphan, but Mom screams that it’s all Hong-do’s fault and swears again that she’ll die if Yi-seok sees her.

This pushes Yi-seok too far, and he tells Mom that he and Se-ro have lived in fear for their mother’s life for years, accusing her of using the threat to hurt her family. He says that their father is worthless and their mother has tried to kill herself countless times, and screams that being an orphan would be better.

This earns him a hard slap, which is when the chairman finally breaks up the argument — but Yi-seok doesn’t even hesitate, demanding that his grandfather tell him where Hong-do is right now. The chairman yells that he doesn’t know, and Yi-seok yells back that the both of them can stop interfering in his relationship now, and he leaves.

Doo-soo takes Hong-do home, but she goes right back to the floor where the pictures are still strewn all over. He tells her she can’t stay there, so she says she’ll clean up the mess and he can go. Instead he gently helps her up, and takes her out for fresh air.

He drives Hong-do out to a beautiful lake in the mountains, where he tells her that if what happened back then is true, she was too young to really be held responsible. Thank you, Detective Voice-of-Reason, I’m glad somebody said it. Hong-do remembers that she lit the fire, and says she’s afraid of what Yi-seok will think if he knows.

Doo-soo offers to be her fall guy if she wants to break up with Yi-seok to protect him from the truth, saying that it’s easier for a man to accept a breakup if there’s a clear reason. She could tell Yi-seok that Doo-soo was so persistent that she couldn’t reject him — which is sweet, but I really don’t think Yi-seok would believe that. Hong-do declines his offer, saying she just has to disappear, which Doo-soo rejects outright.

Se-ro feels depressed after witnessing her family’s blowup, and it’s even worse that Doo-soo isn’t answering her texts. She finally takes his coat to the police station where she runs into Detective Yang (who is, for some reason, dressed like Sherlock Holmes today).

Yang gets a call from Yi-seok, who’s had no luck calling Hong-do’s phone and is now looking for Doo-soo, and he tells him Doo-soo took the day off. Ha, I love his reaction when he gets Yi-seok’s famous hang-up treatment for the first time.

Yang assures a worried Se-ro that Doo-soo is probably just visiting family, but she whines that he should try to reach him anyway. He does, as he asks if she likes his outfit because he has a blind date, because somebody promised him a date but didn’t follow through and he got tired of waiting, HAHAHA. Se-ro sheepishly admits she doesn’t actually know anyone in Korea, but Yang insists (in English) that he likes foreigners too.

Doo-soo and Hong-do are still at the lake that night, since Hong-do is afraid to go home, as Yi-seok sits on her bed and checks his phone every three seconds for a message from her. Doo-soo finally drives her home at dawn, and Yi-seok is still there when they walk into her house together. Well, that looks bad, especially since Hong-do immediately bursts into guilty tears.

With a stony expression, Yi-seok just says it’s fine as long as she’s back, and goes to the door to pull her inside. But instead of being angry, he folds her into a relieved hug and says he forgives her for everything. He realizes something is seriously wrong and asks Hong-do why she’s still upset, and orders Doo-soo to leave them alone when he offers to explain in private.

Doo-soo tries to play the “we stayed out all night together” card, but like I thought, Yi-seok doesn’t buy that they actually did anything. He focuses on Hong-do and says he’s not accusing her of anything — but he lets his worry get to him and he shakes her, demanding to know why she’s unresponsive and what the hell is wrong.

Suddenly, Hong-do collapses at Yi-seok’s feet wailing that she did wrong, over and over. She begs him to forget her and, without a clear explanation, Yi-seok can only assume the worst as Doo-soo tries to pry Hong-do off the floor. Doo-soo tells her she’s done nothing wrong, but Yi-seok gets free and leaves without a word.

Later, Hong-do listens to the messages that Yi-seok sent all night long, flipping from wondering whether she was with Doo-soo to telling her that it doesn’t matter because he just wanted to know that she was safe, to taking the blame for his family’s behavior. It kills me that he still thinks this is about how his family treated her.

Doo-soo looks up the old police file on the fire, but there’s not much information since it was never officially investigated, having been started by a child. Yang suggests he check with the fire department for more information, and Doo-soo says he has and is waiting for the report.

Yi-seok lets himself into Hong-do’s place to find her packing, and says he’s ready to talk. First, he apologizes for how his mother and grandfather treated her, but she tells him to stop. He begs her to tell him what she thinks she did wrong, but she tells him not to ask and just go.

Yi-seok takes this about as well as you’d expect, and he refuses to go without an explanation. Angry and still assuming, he demands to know what she and Doo-soo did, and Hong-do lets him draw his own conclusions and only says she’s sorry. He finally leaves, but only to go to Doo-soo’s place, where it’s Yi-seok’s turn to throw the first punch.

Like he said he would do, Doo-soo takes the blame and says that he took advantage of the opportunity when Yi-seok’s family gave Hong-do a hard time. That’s still too vague for Yi-seok, who wants details, but he calls out Doo-soo on his lies when he implies that he and Hong-do slept together. He knows her too well to believe she’d do such a thing. Yi-seok knows there’s still something he doesn’t know, but he’s not getting the answer from Doo-soo.

Hong-do sits in her indoor garden the next day, and she reaches out to touch a sunbeam as she thinks to her grandmother that if someone got too close to the sun, they would disappear. She wishes that she could do that, and leave the world without a trace or a memory to anyone.

A knock on the door rouses her, and she opens to find Yi-seok’s mother there on the other side. She manically searches for Yi-seok, only acknowledging Hong-do when she grabs her arm and shakes her head that he’s not here. Mom spits that she’s disgusted just looking at Hong-do, who just gets on her knees and says that she’s sorry.

Yi-seok enters the house, just in time to see his mother drop to the floor and shake Hong-do, demanding that she bring her son back. She screams Il-seok’s name and, confused, Yi-seok asks what she means. Mom tries to compose herself and lead him out, but Hong-do rises and starts to speak.

Mom tries to convince Yi-seok to leave before Hong-do can say anything damning, but Hong-do manages to say in a small voice, “I’m Young-ji.” Yi-seok clearly recognizes the name because his head snaps around and his eyes grow wide, and he gasps for air as he realizes what this means.

Hong-do cries as she explains who her grandmother was to his family, and says, “Your brother…” But she doesn’t get to finish her sentence, as she’s interrupted by Yi-seok’s furious scream.

COMMENTS

Oh, that’s hard to watch, and even harder to figure out a way to articulate how I feel about Yi-seok’s reaction to this revelation. I’m glad that Hong-do got the chance to be the one to tell him, because as hard as this will be for Yi-seok to process, I think it would have been even harder if the news had come from anyone but Hong-do. I do think he’s most likely got a not-insignificant amount of guilt for what happened to his brother weighing his own shoulders down, since he was the one who helped him hide so well that he couldn’t escape in time to save his life. That’s going to seriously complicate things, I’m sure. But I’m counting on Yi-seok’s deep capacity for understanding and forgiveness when it comes to the people he loves, and his incredibly strong love for Hong-do, to help them smooth the way back to each other. He seems to understand her so well that, even when faced with incredibly damning evidence, he always knows the truth — so I have faith that after the initial shock, he’ll be able to forgive her this, too.

It’s interesting to see how far Hong-do has come in her recovery, now that everything is falling down around her ears and she has every reason and excuse to fall back on her old habits of avoidance and fear. She’s still afraid, and she still wishes to disappear and avoid all this heartbreak, but when it comes down to it she speaks up and faces the fire, so to speak. Hong-do will always be private and soft-spoken, and will probably always default to retreating and trying to hide when things go badly, but she’s no longer that fearful woman who would hide from the world when things get difficult. When she has to, she can now stand up straight, look people in the eye, and tell the truth — even if it means risking everything. If nothing else, even if things don’t work out with Yi-seok, I love that Hong-do now knows she can be a part of the world instead of hiding from it, and understands that hiding is so much scarier than living.

I also have to mention that I like the friend that Doo-soo has turned out to be for Hong-do, which suits both of them much better than when he was a love interest. He cares about her enough to want to help, and his caring is slowly shifting from “I know what’s best for her” to “I want what’s best for her,” and he’s getting better at letting her define what that is rather than assuming and telling her. Several times in this episode alone, Doo-soo actually asked Hong-do what she wanted, then helped her get that. Though I think his advice isn’t always great (because no, it’s not better to lie when you break up with someone than to tell the truth), I do think it comes from a place of wanting to help. And I love that his instinct now, when Hong-do needs someone, is to call Yi-seok. He finally understands that Yi-seok is who she wants and loves.

I’m counting on this show’s (and these characters’) proven ability to subvert all the usual tropes, and not allow the fallout from this reveal to drag on for too long. Yi-seok has such a great track record of going away to be upset but then coming right back to work things out with Hong-do, and I want to see that happen here, too. They’re so strong together, and they both have a much better chance of healing themselves and Yi-seok’s damaged family together than they do apart. I said previously that this is something I could see the family having difficulty ever forgiving, but now I realize that their challenge isn’t to forgive her… it’s to realize that she was a child, and didn’t know any better, and that there’s nothing to forgive. It was simply a tragic accident, and only by facing the truth together can they all really heal from their loss.

 
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Moon Chae Won is very sad

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Why?

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She's a fan of the show. Posted on her instagram that it's over too soon with a pic of a cute little sad teddy bear.

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Thanks - i knew from reading previous recap comments that she had twitted about this show. So nice to hear that Kdarama/movie actress is following this drama and feeling the sadness along with all of us viewers!

If she is affected - then we can truly say that the actors of this series has done their job well!

i have only wailed with sadness 1 time in a Kdrama - when the dad died in Scandal (2013) at the end of the series - truly wailed with heartfelt sorrow.

This weekend's epidsodes of H2H - had me doing it again.

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THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU omfg I saw the bed scene with them in the first five minutes and I thought I was gonna die bc of the cuteness like my face was gonna split bc of my grin.
That completely changed in the next 55 minutes though...I was weary of the "we knew each other as children" plot but I guess it forces Yi Seok to confront his own inner devils, something he hasn't had to do completely until this moment.
Here's to hoping I survive the next few episodes...

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Good god this episdode.... I was constantly screaming at my screen for someone to TELL Yi Suk already! I was THIS close to throwing things but then... I don't have the money for a new laptop :P xD

I still very much hate that whole childhood connection because I think it was unnecessary and this episode didn't help in calming me down :P

After watching 13 and 14 the only people I truly care for are Se Ro (because she's adorable and showed that she has her heart in the right place) and Yi Suk because damn his family (well sans Se Ro^^) is a piece of work.

And yes I even disliked Hong Do in 13 because while I understand her fears keeping silent was not the right way. I mean Yi Suk loves her and not talking to him = more confusion (and frustration) for the poor guy!

Or maybe after watching an OTP talking about everything (Healer) I have to get used to the 'non-talking about everything OTPs' again xD

So there I said it^^ Now I feel a wee bit better :D

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But I totally understand Hong Do's hesitancy in talking to Yi Suk. I mean, she was directly related to the fire that killed him and the worst part is she actually remembers doing it - she remember lighting the match and the fire spreading up to the storage room. Don't you think you will be guilt ridden had something of that sort happened to you? Because I would be..

And it's not that she was not talking to him because she was scared he would leave her or something; I think the main reason was that she was so guilt-ridden that she could not bear to look him in the eye, specially after knowing that he became that way because of that one incident. So, it was more like she was scared he would forgive her, because she felt she deserved to be shunned for what she did..

That's just my opinion - maybe that's not the truth.. But I totally could sympathise and empathise with her during this episode.

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Oh please, Both KHMM and Heart to Heart break my heart this week...
:(

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Totally true! I can't make myself watch, just waiting for the recap. But on the upside, since the angst have hit rock bottom now, next episodes should be happier rite? *praying*

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SPOILER!!!

Its downhill -___-

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Noooo! Dont say that! I've cried buckets already just for this episode. ?
Guess I'll have to rewatch some old cute scenes afterwards to mend my broken heart. YS & HD fighting! ???

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You better watch episode 14 after episode 15 out, it's hard to wait a week with curiosity, especially after last five minutes in ep 14 his.. hiks...

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Thanks for the recap for a difficult episode.

Holding HD responsible makes about as much sense as holding the match responsible.
I absolutely understand that the mom would not want to see the little girl, and I understand that mom is suffering from a mental illness so she isn't in 100% control, but grampa? Really?

This ep made me very very angry.

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Grandpa knew the secret behind the fire tragedy, and also yi soek father, both of them knew something and try to cover the secret...

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yes grandpa using HD to protect his family, letting her take all the blame when there certainly more to the fire than he letting anyone know about. It is a bit dirty..well a lot, but it very much family first for him and he did give HD's grandma the infamous payoff after he kicked her and HD out. So he not blaming HD, he simply wants to keep her away so she can continue to take the blame for the boys death, rather than bring whatever the thruth or the thruth he fears maybe real, come to light.

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The opening scene had me sobbing.. we get a clearer but yet still an incomplete picture. It seems Il Sook's demise is just not Hong Do/Young Ji's fault alone. What a tragedy...

I dont really mind the childhood connection, this is a Kdrama after all so yeah.. eventhough my heart is already in pieces, just bring it on Show...

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Not sure how I feel about this plot development. Honestly, when Hong Do and Yi Suk got together so fast, I was afraid that the drama would take a turn for the makjang, because otherwise, what conflict would drive the series through its final half? What makes thiis better than the standard weekend Kdrama is the acting and the way the characters are written. I love all their quirks, and even though I've seen this story a zillion times, I was still really caught up in their emotions. I am also rooting for DS and Little Sister now, although I feel like that part is kind of dragging.

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Bless my poor heart this weekend, what a rough 2 days. I love how this show has such raw emotions and the characters are written and portrayed. At first I thought I was going to be upset with the whole childhood portion but between the 13th and 14th episodes it allowed me to connect other things with the characters throughout the whole drama. I just want the whole truth to come out, so we can get back to the HD and YS we love the most. Thank goodness there were some sweet moments or I would still be under my blanket with tissues in hand.

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thanks for the recap

I am so proud of our Go Yisuk for always be the man that stood up for his believes

When he saw DH comeback home and just hug her, my heart feel broke and proud at same time, HD and YS love romance is one of greatest in Kdrama, so solid and strong i don't think anyone can separate them if it's not coming from themselves

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I still really hate that we seem to have fallen into such a makjang drama out of nowhere, but it's totally Dt. Jang and Se Ro who are keeping me with this show. I totally read his face at the hospital confession wrong... it totally looks like a 'wtf kind of situation is this' meta face to me. As for Se Ro, she's just the best ever. full stop. Team Se Ro for life.

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Thanks LollyPip for the recap!!

I was also impressed that hong do now faces the difficult situation head on on her own way. I'm afraid for a second that she will just barred herself once again in her beautiful cave to avoid facing the truth.
All in all, I love all the characters, I also love Yi suk on how consistent he shows love and understanding for HD even in difficult situation (like thinking of HD and DS all night). However he has a lot of things on his shoulder!
Loved Do Soo, he is a real friend this time to HD. Though offering to be a fall guy to break up is not a good idea, he is still much in his character that he only wants to protect HD in a way he knows how.
I feel bad for Se Ro having to grow up in such a family. It's so messed up, that she had to learn to be tough.
Great acting and for me going back to the past just makes all the piece of the puzzle fits together, because whether they want it or not, the past makes up for our present, but does not define our future?

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Haven't cried this much for a drama in years. ???

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Seriously.. i need a group hug esp after ep14

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Me too!

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Episode 14.. gahhh! I had tears coming down and didn't even realize it.

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It was very heart breaking....cried along with the characters....

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I hurt for HD the most...at least Ri Jin in KMHM can always find consolation in her adopted family...but HD is literally alone. She has no one at all. I just want to hug her.

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OMG i cried so much T_T and even more for the next episode. KMHL then this, I was done.
thankU for the recap.

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I'm constantly perplexed how, in Kdramas, the writers make it seem so easy to "send" someone out of the country just because a rich character decrees it. Why would Il-seok assume that his grandfather was successful in forcing Hong Do to leave? Come on, are all poor characters sheep to be ordered about?

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Hehe I guess chaebols have super powers. Like the way they always seem to be able to successfully control the internet just by telling their assistant to get rid of any evidence that shows up on it. I still find it funny how going abroad seems like the go to solution for making someone disappear. It's like once someone goes on that plane there's no way the other person can follow or at least get information to where they went.

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I always like the way all those guys in black appear out of nowhere to do the chaebols dirty work, normally in broad daylight then disappear like ninjas....I wonder if that way they always dress them in black?

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The generic black cap is a staple of kdramas to symbolize someone being mysterious, stealthy and dangerous (ex. Healer, Daegu Daegu in You're all Surrounded, City Hunter, etc.).

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When the Seoul police get a really perplexing crime, their first move has to be to have the street cops bring in every man in the city wearing dark clothes and a black cap. They're all up to something, and its usually evil.

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Lol. It's really funny. Visas, language barriers, securing places to stay, getting schools to accept you - all these issues are somehow non-issues.

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Thanks LollyPip! It is always interesting to read your take of each episode.

The confusion, devastation, guilt and the denials of everyone was very palpable. It somewhat put a damper over my mood too. Too bad i was snowed/iced in my home for fri n sat as i was trapped indoors with my brooding mood after watching this series on fri n sat.

Go Yiseok is a very interesting character - one who might be fast to let off steam but quick to simmer down. I really like that about him. He is very special to me. U can't help but be in his corner. Cha Hongdo - wow - from that girl who would jump if she met a mouse - she is the right one to be by the Doc's side. This couple is so cherished by this viewer.

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Yes, This^

He lets his emotions show but he always apologizes when he has overstepped the lines. Even early on when he called HD to tell her he wasn't going to apologize...she knew.

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I guess it's time for us to take that bitter medicine. We've enjoyed so much cuteness with this couple that I was (dreadfully) expecting this turn of events eventually since this is a kdrama after all. I just take solace in the fact that Yi Seok does not succumb to noble idiocy so easily and his love for Hong Do is probably the strongest I have seen in Kdrama.

I feel really bad for Se Ro. She seems like such an outsider in that crazy family. She can't feel the same grief as the rest of them since technically, she never really knew her dead brother. I've really grown to like her a lot as the drama went on which was a bit surprising since she started off as a such a one dimensional annoying character. She's proven to be such a level headed character as opposed to her mom who I think is bat shit crazy or her dad who is a total douche.

I have a feeling that I am going to hate Grandpa when everything is said and done. He seems to know the truth about what really happened that day and I would find it totally despicable if it turns out that he used a little girl as an escape goat to protect someone else.

Thanks for the recap!

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I'd love to comment on the scapegoat theory, but I'll have to wait until the ep. 14 recap.

I'm really fond of Se-ro now too, though I think this is the umpteenth example of a k-drama making a female character really annoying in the beginning, then far more likable later, but without showing us what prompted the personality change or "character growth". I like that Se-ro hasn't completely changed, but it's like all of a sudden, she became sensitive and sensible.

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Me Too! I was soo against the writer's intention to setting up Se Ro with Detective Jang in the beginning, cause I couldn't stand her at all. I mean I used to FF-ed her parts and thought that her character should've been taken out at all. I'm pleasantly surprised how much I love Se Ro now, and I can't really tell how she has made me fallen in love with her or when.

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Oof! Although it's not always the case, I tend to become extra invested emotionally in OTPs like this one that involve characters finding love after years of limping along through life because of unresolved pain. But it makes the inevitable OTP-separation phase of the drama that much harder to take. It seems so cruel to take their newfound happiness away after everything they've been through. I remember feeling this way during Me Too, Flower. But I'm confident that Hong-do and Yi-seok will get their Happily (and Healed) Ever After, and that their love will be even stronger for having weathered this storm together.

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My Mom and I had a theory about the real culprit behind the fire, and it's not Hong-do. We think it's the father, since it seems like he doesn't care about the situation at all. Plus the face he made when Assistant Kim told him about Cha Young-ji being Yi-suk's girlfriend is a bit suspicious. Also, pertaining the flashback scenes where a young Hong-do played with the match box...they didn't show the fire starting from her matches, did they? That's why we're doubtful of her being the culprit. Or if it wasn't the father, maybe it's someone he knew/knows? And then he just kept quiet about it when Hong-do & her grandma were led away.?
Just a theory, though.

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More pieces of the puzzle come together in ep. 14 but let's remember to save discussing those for the next recap to avoid posting spoilers.

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Oh, haven't downloaded 14 yet, still waiting for subs. Thanks for the heads-up!

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Thank you for the great review. I keep thing Hong Do is preggers because of her belly in opening sequence

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OK, this episode drove me MAD. I kept screaming at Hong Do to TELL HIM ALREADY! And drive the poor man out of his misery!

And poor Yi Suk, he was just so, so sweet in this episode. Big sigh. There's no way to avoid it, it's going to be awful when he finds out. He locked his brother up in that container, so if there's anyone who would blame himself, it would be him because his brother was unable to escape from the fire.

Who I really blame for all this mess is dear Grandpa. Why tell Yi Suk's mom when it's clear to everyone she's mad with grief and unpredictable? Why not just deal with everything privately? Now she spilled the beans to Hong Do and it's only a matter of time before Yi Suk knows. There's no way Hong Do can keep it from Yi Suk indefinitely, it's like sitting on a loaded cannon.

What a sad, sad episode... I'm NOT crying... I just have something in my eye... seriously.

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Thanks Soooo very much for the great recap! As always, you make everything so clear cut and true to the scrip when recapping each episode. Amazingly done! Love and thanks to you girls! You rock! Aloha ;)

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Thank you so much for the recap!

Watched Ep 13 and 14 right after the last two episodes of KMHM and cried for 4 hours straights...why do these shows have to be so heartbreaking all at once?

I really wonder what exactly does YS's grandpa and father are hiding?

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I think I can guess, but I will wait until the recap of the next episode before spilling the beans...

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I think DS is warming up to SR, and just doesn't realize he likes her yet...maybe the same thing happened with HD, so if that's the case I hope he learns. I didn't feel like DS was being all that nice by the end. He was pretty disrespectful to YS, and normally I don't care so much, but that sort of behavior at this point in time, is way more unacceptable than before. I mean he was JUST told about how HD killed his brother...he was nice enough when HD was around but I still think he was being honest when he said he wasn't done with her. Isn't there anything better he could have come up with besides cheating? I almost thought he was hoping she would cheat in that scene.

I'm worried about the family. Seems like a lot of their dysfunction is from guilt, but what exactly are they guilty about? Are they guilty about happened to their son or what they did to HD? I don't know how they are going to get over that whatever it is, and I don't know how this couple works with them in the picture.

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This drama is starting to break my heart, it's so sad , I'm considering pausing until something good starts to happen. I can't take all this sadness at all.

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