BW C11
by berryChapter 11
âHaaâŠâ
Taemuk devoured Hoeun without sense or measure. That was what struck Hoeun as strange. At first, he had thought it was mockery, or an attempt to frighten him, but it didnât feel that way.
Mockery requires leisureâto watch the otherâs shame or distress. Until now, Taemuk had behaved like that.
But not now. Now he seemed more frantic than the one being kissed.
Could this be not mockery at all, but that act a Military God and a guide are said to perform by right? So he dimly wondered.
At last, Taemuk tore his mouth away.
âHhtâŠâ
Hoeunâs fingers flew to his lips, checking if they were still attached. His mouth burned and throbbed. He had suffered every ailment under the sun, but never pain of the lips.
âHa, damn itâŠâ
Head bowed, Taemuk bit off a curse. Then his hand clamped the wall. It was masonryâsolid brickâyet his fingers sank into it like clay. With a gritty crack, the wall crumbled.
âHuâŠâ
He held himself there for a moment. His shoulders trembledâfine, small spasmsâlike a man trying to contain something. Or digest it. It was uncanny. Hoeun could not even demand an answer for what had just happened.
They caught their breath to different beats. Then, without warning, Taemuk thrust a hand into Hoeunâs robe.
âAh!â
His cry echoed in the narrow space. Taemuk paid it no mind, rummaging for bare skin. Well-fitted garments wrinkled and stretched; under that rough strength, the cloth felt on the verge of tearing.
âG-general, donât. Mind yourâyour station.â
âMy station?â
Taemuk chuckled, as if amused.
âDo I look like I have such a thing?â
His eyes glinted, wild as a beastâs; the black irises churned, savage. Hoeun feared those eyes. It felt as if he might truly do something terrible.
âLet go!â
âWhy. You donât like it? Didnât you say youâd do anything? What use is a guide who wonât do this?â
âGeneral!â
âKeep yammering and Iâll break your wrist. You donât need a wrist for fucking.â
At the cruelty of it, Hoeunâs lashes quivered. He shut his eyes tight, then opened them, trying for calm.
âIâI donât mean I wonât.â
âThen do.â
âOnlyâtoday, I want to be with my parents.â
âHa.â
A short, cut-off laugh.
âAnd why should I indulge that?â
Mouth full of mockery, he reached deeper into Hoeunâs clothesâ
âPlease,â Hoeun whispered, voice damp. âI might⊠not come back.â
ââŠâ
Taemuk froze. Hoeun looked up, eyes swimming. Please. Please⊠his lips shaped the words without sound.
Truthfully, a guide should not refuse a Military Godâs request. It wasnât law, but it was expected: a Military Godâs vigor served the nation.
So he should complyâbut not tonight. Tonight could be his last with his parents.
ââŠâ
For a long breath, Taemuk said nothing. Hoeun waited, quiet, for his decision. A single tear slid down his white cheek.
How long passed like that? With a rough sigh of irritation, Taemuk let him go. His heavy boots shiftedâ
ââŠâ
He walked past Hoeun. Hoeun turned, following him with his eyes. Taemukâs back receded toward the dining room, then vanished around a corner.
At the same time, Hoeunâs legs gave and he slid down the wall. He sat on the floor for a long while, catching his breath. Then he scrubbed away the tears beaded at his eyes and, swaying, pushed himself up by the wall.
His clothes were a mess, wrinkled and torn here and there by Taemukâs rough hands. His once-neat hair was disordered; his neck where heâd been gripped, and his lip where heâd been struck, ached as if bruised.
Face wan, he straightened his attireâthen abruptly sank down again. Pressing his lips with the back of his hand, he wept in silence.
He had thought a guide would be his salvation.
Perhaps it would be a curse.
Dressed in a cheollik, the hunting robe, Hoeun left his room and sat on the veranda. His mother and father were inside; they had spent the night in his room.
His mother had come first, then his father. The three lay packed on the narrow bed and talked the night away. Then Mother cried first; Hoeun followed. Father stared into the dark without a word.
Hoeun sniffed, unable to scrub away the traces of tears. He rubbed at his swollen, heavy lids. When he tried to slip on his shoes, his hands missed; they werenât his usual pair but tall military boots.
âIâll do it.â
Father crouched before the threshold and put them on for him. Hoeun didnât stop him. This, too, might be the last time. He had worn the word âlastâ threadbare since yesterday.
The last shared meal, the last tea, the last time Mother pressed his clothes, the last time he held Fatherâs hand, the last time he slept, the last time he cried, the last time he wokeâlast and last and lastâŠ
âWhen your eldest brother first left home, I put his shoes on like this.â
âYou did?â
âYes. He was young then, too. Not as small as your feet, but small enough. When he said he would go to the front on those feet⊠Truly⊠I never thought Iâd feel that again.â
Nostalgia dulled Fatherâs voice. Guilt weighed on Hoeun.
âIâm sorry, Father.â
At that, Father snapped his head up.
âWhat on earth are you sorry for!â
ââŠâ
âA man belongs in the great waters. If youâre going to the front, it ought to be with Jeokudae.â
ââŠâ
âIâll tell the world. Our youngestâour Euniâhas joined Jeokudae.â
He smiled at Hoeun, then stood.
âAll done.â
ââŠâ
Hoeun tapped the floor with his neatly shod feet. At that moment, tackâtackâsomething clopped into the front yard. A black horse. Hoeun stared as it snorted, proud.
âThatâsâŠâ
âMy horse. Take him.â
âYour horse? But⊠IâI donât know how to ride.â
Hoeun glanced away, abashed; Father laughed and stroked his cheek.
âDo you take your father for a fool? I know your second brother taught you.â
ââŠâ
So he knew. There were automobiles enough on the streets now, but horses were still the main transport. Even children, if not on horses, could ride donkeysâbut Hoeun rode neither. His health had not allowed it.
Pitying him, his second brother had taught him in secret. In truth, that meant little more than perching on the beast while his brother held the reins and walked slowly around the back garden.
Strictly speaking, he could not ride.
While he stared at the horse with a face mixed of fear and nerves, Father led him up to it.
âHeâs never run beyond the city walls, but heâs a clever one. Heâll carry you well.â
ââŠâ
Hoeun stroked the glossy coat. A splendid jurak and saddle; the stirrups shone.
He studied each piece, and a small smile flickered. Excitement. To guide such a horse and ride to the front to defend the nationâhim. Wasnât it dashing? Call it childish if one wishedâwhat man had not dreamed it at least once?
Another horse appeared then, drawing a cart piled high with baggageâexaggerating only slightly, a houseful of it. Nureong circled and sniffed at the load.
âThe luggageâŠâ
Hoeun looked at Father, aghast. He averted his eyes, sheepish.
âAhem⊠Seemed youâd need much, so we packed amply.â
Hoeun opened his mouth, then closed it. It was all worry, he knewâmostly Motherâs, more than Fatherâs, perhaps.
He glanced at Mother, who stood behind Father, her head lowered. She did not look at him.
Footnotes:
Jurak (ç 甥): Ornamental red cords and horsehair trimmings used to dress the horses of kings or high officials, denoting status and ceremony.
Deungja (éć): Stirrup; the metal support for the riderâs feet attached to the saddle, crucial for mounting and control.