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Will You Marry Me K DRAMA TWIXTOR

“Will You Marry Me?” – A K‑Drama Story

Han Jiwon had always believed her life would follow a careful plan. At 29, she worked as a wedding planner in one of Seoul’s most prestigious event companies, crafting perfect fairy‑tale moments for other couples. With her calm personality, quiet elegance, and meticulous attention to detail, she was known as the woman who could “create love even where it didn’t exist.” Yet ironically, Jiwon herself had never experienced a romance worth remembering. Love, to her, was something she assembled for others — never for herself.

Enter Kang Minho, the CEO of a rising tech startup famous for his genius innovations and infamous for his cold, impatient demeanor. After a PR mishap threatens his company, Minho is pressured to improve his public image. His team convinces him to participate in a charity wedding-themed project: a mock wedding photoshoot featuring celebrities and public figures — and he needs a wedding planner to manage it.

When Minho meets Jiwon, sparks do not fly. In fact, the first meeting is a disaster. Minho arrives late, criticizes her designs, and insists on unrealistic changes. Jiwon, tired after a long day, snaps back at him — something no one ever dared to do. Shocked but intrigued, Minho finds himself thinking about her more than he should. Meanwhile, Jiwon tries to avoid him, telling herself he’s just another demanding client.

But fate intervenes. The charity project becomes a huge hit, and Minho and Jiwon must work together closely. Slowly, Minho’s icy exterior begins to melt, revealing someone surprisingly warm, humorous, and vulnerable. He starts bringing her coffee every morning — though he insists it’s “business-related.” Jiwon notices the small ways he tries to understand her world: learning about flower meanings, visiting bridal boutiques, even practicing how to smile naturally for the cameras.

Jiwon, for her part, finds herself drawn to him despite her better judgment. She sees a lonely man burdened by expectations, someone who has spent years hiding behind logic and ambition. Their late‑night planning sessions turn into soft conversations about dreams, fears, and childhood memories. Somewhere in those moments, something fragile yet powerful begins to bloom.

Just when romance seems inevitable, Jiwon’s past resurfaces. Her ex-fiancé, who left her three years earlier, returns unexpectedly, asking for another chance. His reappearance shakes her confidence, reopening old wounds she thought she had healed. Minho, seeing them together, misinterprets the situation and starts to distance himself, believing Jiwon deserves someone without the emotional baggage he carries.

The tension reaches a breaking point during the final charity event — the mock wedding. Jiwon and Minho must walk down the aisle together for the staged photos, but the unspoken hurt between them fills the room. As the cameras flash, Minho suddenly stops, turns to her, and whispers, “Why does pretending to marry you hurt more than anything real in my life?”

The words shatter Jiwon’s carefully built walls. With tears gathering in her eyes, she admits, “Because it stopped being pretend for me too.”

The room gasps as Minho drops the script, takes her hands, and kneels — unscripted, unplanned, completely real. “Han Jiwon,” he says softly, “Will you marry me? Not for the cameras. Not for charity. For us.”

The moment is raw, honest, and overflowing with everything they had been afraid to say. Jiwon nods through tears, and the room erupts in applause. For once, she’s not planning someone else’s perfect day — she’s finally stepping into her own.

Their love, born from misunderstandings, healed by vulnerability, and strengthened by genuine connection, becomes a reminder that sometimes the most unexpected people create the most unforgettable love stories.

“Will You Marry Me?” ends with a real wedding — simple, intimate, beautiful — proving that the best stories aren’t scripted. They’re lived.

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