BW C5
by berryChapter 5
âEek…â
Hoeun dropped the shoe he was holding. It fell off the thresholdâthud, thunk, trrrârolling all the way across the courtyard.
But he couldnât bring himself to pick it up, remaining bent over. His father went and fetched the shoe himself. Seeing that, Hoeun snapped back to his senses.
âI just, uh, felt stifled and thought Iâd, j-just take a turn around the courtyard…â
He stammered an excuse. His arm, pointing toward the yard, fluttered like a pigeonâs wing. His father fixed him with his characteristically stern gaze. Then suddenly, with a deep sigh, he crouched before Hoeun and began to put the shoe on him.
âThe road is long. With those short steps of yours, you wonât arrive even by dayâs end.â
â…â
âA palanquin is prepared. Take it.â
â…Pardon?â
Failing to grasp the situation, Hoeun looked at his father, baffled.
âIf you donât find your partner at once, donât be too disappointed. The Fate-Matching Ceremony is held twice a year; spring will bring another chance.â
Instead of an explanation, his father continued with advice. His hands kept working, fitting Hoeunâs shoes, brushing off dirt, straightening the inner slippersâwith boundless gentleness.
At last, his father finished, yet couldnât quite let go of his feet.
âWith feet this soft, and you mean to seek out such a harsh place…â
Muttering to himself, he heaved a sigh heavy enough to sink the earth.
By then, Hoeun understood his fatherâs intent. His nose stung; his vision blurred. On the verge of tears, he couldnât help but fling himself into his fatherâs arms.
âFather. Father. Thank you, Father.â
âGoodness…â
The sudden embrace made his father land on his rear, but instead of annoyance, he patted Hoeunâs back.
âEun-ah, itâs all right to want things. Do everything you wish. Whatever you want to do, I will let you do.â
At those words, Hoeun paused a moment. So Father had heard the conversation with Mother yesterday. Heâd said many hurtful things; he worried what wounds those words had left in his fatherâs heart, yet he was relieved as wellâbecause heâd been granted what he desired.
His father, who had been stroking his back, now hugged him tightly and closed his eyes. He could feel, faintly, the beat of that small, precious heart. The thought of sending that heart out into the world made the sky feel as if it were collapsing.
Yet he realized he could not keep Hoeun only as a son held in his arms. Hoeun needed a life of his own.
With a dry cough, as if choked up, he eased Hoeun away and slowly rose, calling for Deokwoo.
âDeokwoo, are you there?â
âYes, sir.â
âGo with Hoeun.â
âYes, I will attend him well.â
Deokwoo appeared from the side and bowed his head. Hoeunâs father helped him to his feet, dusted the dirt from his knees, and smoothed the silk ribbon tying his hair. After fussing over him for quite some time, he finally stepped back.
âThen I shall be off, Father.â
Hands folded neatly, Hoeun bowed and headed for the palanquin waiting in the courtyard.
His father watched with hands clasped behind his back, then murmured in a hollow voice,
âI should have fed him breakfast…â
It had been a private remark, yet an answer came from beside him.
âIâve loaded fruit into the palanquin.â
It was his mother. His father raised his brows in surprise, then chuckled softly.
âHave you?â
âYes. Plenty, even for Deokwoo. I didnât forget the snacks, either.â
âVery well done.â
By then, Hoeun had reached the palanquin and bowed again to his parents. They smiled faintly and exchanged words too soft for Hoeun to hear, his father speaking first.
âHe looks exhausted before heâs even left. I fear heâll catch another fever when he returns.â
âI almost wish he doesnât meet his partner today… Is that too cruel?â
â…I feel the same. But I canât bear to see him disappointed either, so I donât know myself.â
His father sighed shortly; his mother let out a matching sigh, as if sharing his thoughts.
By then, the palanquin bearing Hoeun passed through the front gate. The two stood unmoving until it was out of sight.
Once Hoeun had completely disappeared, his father said to his mother,
âI should go to the palace today.â
âFor what reason?â
âTo return His Majestyâs car.â
Lowering his gaze slightly, he spoke. His mother, watching him quietly, nodded.
âDo so.â
âEveryone looks like pigs being dragged to the slaughter, young master.â
At Deokwooâs words, Hoeun looked around.
The Fate-Matching Ceremony was held in an auditorium owned by the Imperial University. Taegeuk flags hung from the ceiling at regular intervals, plum blossom motifs carved into the stone pillars. Wide windows stood on all sides, and the morning sun poured in, brilliant and sharp.
Below, people presumed to be guides thronged togetherâand their expressions were uniformly grim.
It was understandable. They were bound for the battlefield. By law, anyone who awakened and failed to serve the nation was put to death; they had come to die in order not to die. The phrase âpigs led to slaughterâ did not feel far off.
Moreover, all the guides were youngâseemingly younger than twenty-year-old Hoeun. They said most awakened in their teens; it seemed that was true.
âThe battlefield is not a welcoming place. Does my face look gloomy as well?â
At Hoeunâs question, Deokwoo shook his head so hard his cheeks quivered.
âNo. Young master always looks fair.â
â…â
Hoeun stroked his cheek. âFairâ did not sound like praise. He wasnât fair; he was pale.
He hoped he didnât look sickly. He might meet his Military God here todayâhis friend, perhaps even family…
He checked his carefully adjusted attire yet again whenâ
âThe ceremony will begin shortly. Please form lines!â
Soldiers bearing the insignia of the Daehan Empire moved through the crowd, arranging them. In short order, a hundred or so people stood in repeated ăč-shaped rows.
Hoeun found himself deep inside the hall. The sunlight reached there especially well; it seemed he would not feel cold even after standing awhile.
âWhoo…â
He took a deep breath. Nerves made his heart pound hard. He wasnât used to meeting strangers. His face alternated between white and flushed; behind him, Deokwoo asked anxiously,
âYoung master, shall I fetch water?â
âNo, Iâm fine.â
Hoeun shook his head. His throat felt too tight for water to go down. Swallowing dryly, he looked around and suddenly noticed something odd.
Among the hundreds of guides in line, there were no nobles. One couldnât judge status by clothing these days, and yetâno one looked like a noble.
â…â
By law, those who awakened had to serve the nation or face execution. So why were there no nobles?
Because heaven had so ordained?
No. Heaven would not choose to awaken everyone but the nobles.
âOrders and laws differ depending on the person.â
Recalling his fatherâs words, Hoeun clenched his fists. If there were no nobles among the guides, then among the Military Godsâwho had to stake their lives and fight monsters directlyâthe proportion of nobles would be obvious without even seeing it.
âHow could they…â
Be so shameless?
As dismay surged and he lowered his gaze, a shout rang out from afar.
âThe Military Gods are coming!â
At that, people craned their necks toward the entrance. Soon, the Military Gods streamed into the hall.
âAh…â
âGood heavens…â
A chorus of gasps roseânot pleasant ones. For the bodies of the Military Gods were uniformly battered. Some leaned on crutches; some had their heads bandaged; some had skin torn so savagely they were hard to look at. Bandages were wrapped around necks, wrists, and ankles visible between uniforms. It was a wonder they had walked here at all.
âDear me…â
Deokwoo hunched his neck and looked away.
â…â
Hoeun, too, was startled. Not at the sight of them, but at the fact that they were injured. Military Gods were ghostlike soldiersâso strong, so hard to injure, said to heal quickly even when hurt.
And yet they looked like that. How strong, then, must the monsters be?
Had his Military God been injured as well?
Hoeun already worried for the one whose name and face he did not yet know.
Footnotes:
- Taegeuk flag and plum blossom motifs indicate a Korean Empire-inspired setting; the Taegeukgi symbolizes cosmic balance and became Koreaâs national flag in the late 19th century, while the plum blossom (Ihwa) served as an imperial emblem associated with the House of Yi.
- Fate-Matching Ceremony (Inyeonje): A ritualized event in this world where guides and Military Gods seek their destined partners; âpartnerâ implies an optimal stabilizing match rather than a generic pairing.
- Execution for non-service reflects the storyâs militarized legal framework where awakening entails compulsory national duty; the âpigs to the slaughterâ metaphor underscores the coercive nature of conscription.