HMN C3
by berryChapter 3
âLetâs see. Just as I thought, I packed chicken breast in my bagâŠ.â
A college student living off part-time work in a one-room villa was hardly going to treat himself to proper meals. At the end of each month, he would boil up a weekâs worth of substitutes like sweet potatoes and chicken breast, stash them in zip bags for dinner, and sometimes they served handily as cat food on nights like this.
âDonât go scavenging food waste⊠You should be eating healthy protein, you rascalâŠ.â
Even drunk as he was, rummaging through his bag ended with him plopping down on the groundâbut he didnât care, plunging his hand into the backpack. Fumble, fumble. After a long dig, something crinkly met his fingers.
âFound it.â
Sniff. He snorted back his nose once more and pulled out a zip bag with about a third of the chicken breast left.
âHere you go, itâs unsalted.â
Nod. Nod.
He held out the chunk of chicken breast in his hand, but the cat wouldnât close the distance. He dusted off his seat and dropped into a crouch. Here. Come on. He stretched his arm out a couple more times, and this time the cat outright bolted away.
âHeyâŠ.â
Normally, he would have left it by the utility pole or tossed it and gone home. The trouble was how drunk he was.
After being rejected from every job heâd applied to, and after even his friends had left him drunk and alone, he now felt, absurdly, as if this small creature were also spurning his sincerity. His lower lip and cheeks puffed.
âYou donât like this? Want me to buy you Churu? Just try this. One bite and youâll change your mindâŠ.â
Try it. Just one bite. Saying as much, he quickened his steps toward where the cat had fled. Plod, plod. His unsteady gait wobbled onward.
âYouâre hungry, andâugh!â
Thwack!
Running on jelly legs while thoroughly drunk was not, as it turned out, a wise plan. He barely made it any distance before tumbling across the asphalt of a dim alley. There wasnât a single pebble at his feet; he had simply tangled himself up and gone down. Flung at least a meter, he instinctively threw both arms wide.
Sssssk!
âGasp.â
Both palms scorched. His knees, stamped hard against the ground, throbbed viciously, and his jaw ached as if it might crack.
âHnn, ahâŠ.â
But he didnât have the strength to spring up. He wasnât even sure what state he was in. The chill of the asphalt had reached his face, and all he could do was blink and lift his head. He saw the chicken breast heâd been holding lying several steps ahead.
âDamn.â
Thank goodness there was no one in the alley but the cat. Even drunk, that thought came, because he dimly understood how hideously he had fallen.
Tap.
Still sprawled, he tipped his chin up.
There was someone after all. In the very alley heâd thought was empty. Near where the chicken breast had landed. The tall manâs face was masked by the streetlightâs shadow, and he couldnât make out the features.
âAh, sorââ
It wasnât as if theyâd collided; he had nothing to apologize for, and yet the word came first. He planted his hands to try to stand, but it wasnât easy. This time his palms flared fiercely.
âAh.â
In the end, he couldnât get up. The skin of his hands, rasped raw on the ground, hurt too much, and the strength had drained from his legs. He managed only to turn his hands palm-up.
ââŠâŠâ
Somehow the asphalt had abraded them white, the skin on his palms ragged, and vivid red blood began to seep through the flaps. The pain throbbed, dull and imprecise, so he curled and uncurled his fingers.
Tap.
Footsteps drew near. The man who had stood a little ahead was now almost upon him. Even then, Daeyoung was still melted into his stupor, blinking from where he lay. So he imagined the stranger might help him up, or pick up his bag that had flipped to one side, or at least ask if he was okay. Vaguely, he thought so. Sure enough, the person who came to a stop in front of him extended a hand.
Perhaps the world was still kind. He mustered all his strength, reached out to brace himself, and began to lift his torso to take the hand.
Thud.
But in the next moment, the arm heâd extended to grasp on cleaved only air, and his upper body pitched forward again. The person who had offered a hand as if to pull him up had withdrawn it at once and straightened.
What is this. With his mouth half open, Daeyoung raised his head, dazed. To pull back a hand like thatâmight as well be mockery. As drunken thoughts boiled and shifted, anger crawled up. Using the fingers of the hand that wasnât split open, he pushed against the ground and hauled himself upright. Slowly, haltingly, he straightened his back, limping on his knees. Even so, the height difference remained, but they were close enough now for the otherâs face to come into focus.
Unfortunately, it was a familiar face.
âYou again? You never run out of ways to make a spectacle.â
The man who had, yet again, witnessed Ahn Daeyoungâs most embarrassing moment spoke in a flat voice and walked right past him.
ââŠâŠâ
He wanted to say something like, A personâs fallen and canât get upâare you not even going to help? But his palms were bleeding freely, his knees were pulsing with pain, and more than anything, something had gone wrong when he fell: his stomach lurched.
âUrk.â
Clamping a hand over his mouth, he reflexively curled inward and pushed himself to his feet.
By then, the man was already going on his way without a backward glance.
That bastard again. The alcohol flooding his body bubbled like lava. Yet even that fury didnât last long. His pocket buzzed; the moment he answered, Wonjungâs voice was shouting. Somewhere around then, the night blacked out completely for Daeyoung.
âIs my brain⊠on fire?â
â Good. Real good.
Ten oâclock in the morningâindustrious people had already been busy for hours. Wonjungâs voice grazed his ear. Daeyoung tapped his screen to put it on speaker, set the phone by his pillow, and curled tighter. Every movement sent a hideous headache roaring through him. A hangover.
âHow did I get home? I think Iâm dyingâŠ.â
He remembered knocking back drinks at the bar, and then nothing. Noâmaybe they went to karaoke. He could almost picture himself gripping a mic and screaming the high notesâŠ.
â How would I know? While I was putting that punk Haegyeom in a taxi, you got yourself home.
âDamn. I canâtâah!â
â What? Whatâs wrong.
âSss, huh? What is thisâŠ.â
He couldnât even open his swollen eyes; he twisted on the bed and suddenly contorted with a searing pain.
â Whatâs wrong, I said.
Blood.
ââŠHey. My hands are bleeding a lot?â
Both palms were caked with dark red scabs. He stared, horrified, then slowly peeled back the blanket. The throbbing wasnât only in his hands.
â What?
ââŠMy knees are bleeding too?â
â Ha⊠you insane bastardâŠ.
Looked like heâd come home drunk and still stripped off his pants before getting into bed. Below his bare thighs, a big, bright red scab had formed over a shattered knee.
âGod, where did I do this againâŠ.â
â Bravo. Huh? Excellent, you idiot.
âIt hurts so muchâŠ.â
He didnât remember it cleanly, but he was pretty sure heâd fallen in an alley. He vaguely recalled thinking his knees and palms had been scraped raw and stingingâŠ.
â How bad can it be. Want to come out for hangover soup?
âIf I go out like this, Iâm a mutt. Go where? Iâm not going anywhere. Just hang up for nowâŠ.â
On any other day the lure of soup would have swayed him, but as he woke from that analgesic drunken sleep, the pain sharpened. He hurriedly ended the call and gingerly stood, heading for the bathroom. He could swear heâd promised himself on the way out last night to drink moderately and come straight back, but once he started with those guys, there was no end.
What the bright bathroom lights revealed was a wreck. Youth was youthâovernight, the wounds had already begun to scab, matted with gray asphalt grit. He stared at his face, still red and puffy with leftover alcohol, then awkwardly climbed into the tub, careful not to bend his knees too much. First, heâd rinse the filthy wounds with lukewarm waterâand shower while he was at it.
âUgh! Ah! Sss, ah!â
Obviously, he groaned the whole time he showered. As he gently washed the dust-caked wounds with warm water, blood ran in thin streams. Limping back into the living room to disinfect them, he found himself, humiliatingly, sniffling tears.
âIf I drink again, Iâm not human.â
A resolution of absolutely no use. If he said that in front of his friends, theyâd either ask if he was finally admitting he was a dog, or jam a soju bottle between his lips and tell him to bark. Swallowing bitter tears, he rifled through the first-aid kit.
âGod, kill me.â
He plastered on hydrocolloid bandages, stripped the blood-smudged bedding, and ran a full wash, but the hangover held fast. This was why he kept a mini-fridge stuffed with barley tea and sports drinks: he gulped them down. Sleep would be better for a hangover than this, but there was something he had to do.
âLetâs see⊠course registration, general electivesâŠ.â
He needed one elective to fill his credits. The popular ones were already full; heâd have to pick from the dregs.
âUgh, all the good ones are closed.â
When theyâd drafted schedules, heâd just copied whatever Koo Wonjung made and never really looked. Now, belatedly, he saw only the classes everyone avoided were left. He hated intros, hated rote-heavy coursesâŠ.
âSss⊠Volunteer work?â
But the deliberation didnât last. A pretty time slot, a perfect fit for the hole in his schedule. He didnât love the course itself, but handled right, it could be killing two birds with one stone. Besides, if he didnât take that, heâd need a morning class another dayâthis was the best option for now.
Click, click.
At times like this, quick hands beat words. After a couple of clicks, heâd cobbled together a timetable for the semester with surprising ease. Leaning back to scan the monitor, he lifted his phone to his ear as it buzzed again. Wonjung.
âUgh, what. I said Iâm not going out.â
â Hey, is this you? Check your messages.
ââŠâŠâ
The tone, out of nowhere, was ominous. His face tightened as he tapped the screen. Moments ago, his messenger had been a wasteland; now the red badge was plump. Sixty-three new messages. Iâm not even an insider yet. He had a bad feeling.