Divorce Contract C87
by berryChapter 87
Faced with Shin Eunsukâs grave and almost tragic expression, something inside Seo Dohyeon hollowed out entirely. The despair swelling in his chest made it impossible to utter anything close to the truth. He opened his mouth to speakâbut no confession, no explanation came.
After agonizing in silence, the only thing he managed was a pathetic excuse:
âI⊠will go ahead first.â
Cowardice, plain and simple.
He slipped past Eunsuk, eyes fixed on the empty spot where Igyeol had stood only moments earlier, and retreated into the study. The door shut behind him with a soft click. Leaning his back against it, he closed his eyes.
Why, he wondered, does clarity only arrive when the damage is already irreversible?
Why does understanding always strike too late?
And why⊠why is the life Go Igyeol faces always so unbearably cruel?
A cold realization settled in his bones. Everythingâeverythingâwas collapsing beyond his reach. Every attempt heâd made to fix things was nothing but a sandcastle, washed away in a single wave. And he had come to understand this far too late.
Chapter IV
To ordinary couples, a child might be the symbol of love.
But to Seo Dohyeon, the child was proofâundeniable proofâof his sins.
And to Go Igyeol, the baby remained an open wound that refused to heal.
Around that time, the childâs birth registration was finally completed.
For Igyeol, today was no different from yesterday, or the day before that. His days passed quietly, uneventfully.
But misfortune, as always, struck him when he least expected it.
Leaving the NICU after seeing the baby, heading home as usualâ
that was when he encountered the first calamity of the day.
âOur dear Igyeol looks so much healthier now. Ah, of courseâyou had just given birth when we last saw you. So frail you looked then, like you might collapse if I so much as nudged you. Truly⊠you were weak. That slap I gave you mustâve hurt quite a bit, didnât it?â
Go Daesik elbowed Kang Mijin with a laugh, urging her to play along. With her bare face, not a trace of makeup on, she rushed up and hugged Igyeol tightly.
âWhat part of this thin little body is even fit for hitting? And yet this man actually struck youâcompletely insane! And you call this recovery? Heaven help us, youâve suffered terribly. Childbirth isnât easy, especially alone. Without your mother thereâhow did you endure it?â
Her expression twisted into a mask of tragic compassionâexcept not a bit of true feeling lay behind it. Her brows tightened, her eyes glimmered theatrically, not a single tear produced despite the display. She dabbed the corner of her dry eye with the back of her hand.
âWhy didnât you tell us you were pregnant? Why suffer without a word? How could you keep such news from your parents? But anyway⊠how have you been? Your face is half what it used to be. This is what happens when you donât rest properly after childbirth.â
ââŠHow did youââ
Only Igyeol stood frozen, blindsided by their sudden appearance.
Shin Eunsuk, however, instantly understood who they wereâthe brother and sister-in-law who had raised him after his parentsâ death. Even so, she held back. This wasnât a moment for her to step in lightly.
Her eyes flicked over Daesikâs filthy beard, the way he chain-smoked in front of someone whoâd just given birth.
As for the woman calling herself âMother,â her honeyed tone rang empty, utterly devoid of sincerity.
ââŠShin Eunsuk.â
âKang Mijin. Igyeolâs mother.â
Mijin beamed, clutching tighter onto Igyeolâs arm.
As if she had any right to call herself that.
âLetâs go then, shall we?â she chirped.
Daesik burst into rough laughter.
âYes, whereâs this new place you moved into? I went by the old one and nearly had a heart attack seeing it empty! And this seaweed soupâI made a fresh batch twice! But at least we met today. Now that Mother is here, you donât have to worry about a thing.â
Chattering nonstop, she pulled at Igyeol as though he were luggage and not a person. Behind them, Eunsuk followed reluctantly, her face tense. She could see clearly how distressed he wasâbut what right did she have to interfere? She was an outsider; they were âfamily.â
Dragged along, Igyeolâs steps faltered. He turned back, meeting Eunsukâs gazeâfull of concern and helplessnessâand his chest twisted painfully.
ââŠMay I⊠call Seo Dohyeon?â
The moment he said it, Daesik and Mijin lit up like lanterns.
Of course. If Dohyeon came, the door to money opened.
If they played this right, they could:
move into the new house
pretend it was for âpostpartum careâ
get paid for their âhelpâ
and, if need be, use the infant as leverage
Mijinâs face brightened with greedy anticipation.
âYes! Yes, call him. Itâs been far too long since Iâve seen our dear son-in-law. Quick, hereâuse my phone.â
She shoved her device at himâmeaning he was to dial from her number.
Nervous, Igyeol punched in Dohyeonâs number.
On her screen, his contact name was saved coldly as âSeo Dohyeon (Go Igyeol).â
Not âson-in-law.â
Not âfamily.â
Just a label tied to whatever money he represented.
ââŠItâs a bit cold today, isnât it?â she muttered, trying to look casual.
âYes⊠it is.â
But the words meant nothing.
The truth was obvious: she had never once regarded him as family.
She only ever saw him as Daesikâs income source.
Igyeol lifted the phone. It rang once, twiceâ
âThis is Seo Dohyeon.â
ââŠItâs Go Igyeol. Iâm⊠in front of the hospital right nowâŠâ
âIâm already on my way. Wait there.â
The call ended.
How he knew, why he was already nearbyâIgyeol didnât know.
But relief washed through him like warm water.
âHe said heâs coming,â he whispered, handing the phone back.
âIn this cold? You shouldâve told him to go straight home after work!â Mijin scolded. âWhy make him come hereââ
But she grabbed Daesik and started walking anyway, already imagining the payout. Spotting a row of café signs, she motioned for him to follow.
ââŠAunt, maybe you should go home first. As for meâŠâ
âIgyeol.â
âIt would be better if you went ahead. Please. Just this once⊠please go first.â
There was no embarrassment in showing weakness to Eunsuk.
Only shameâshame that she might witness how those who called themselves his parents treated him.
âIâll stay close,â she promised. âSee that blue sign? Iâll wait there until youâre done.â
ââŠâŠâ
âWe said we would walk together today, remember? Look around the neighborhood? Visit the baby shop?â
ââŠNext time, Aunt. Next timeâŠâ
He placed a trembling hand on her shoulderâjust a touch, briefâand pulled away again. Then, feeling as though iron weights were shackled to his ankles, he trudged toward the cafĂ© where Daesik and Mijin waited.
Though the ground beneath him was solid, he felt like he was sinkingâdown, down, into dark water, unable to breathe.