BW C84
by berryChapter 84
By the time Hoeun was so breathless that he felt he could no longer draw air, they finally reached the top of the slope.
[Ramjae Town East Shelter]
At the crest of the hill, the wind struck even harder. It was gusting so strongly that the shelter post hammered deep into the ground groaned creeak, creeeak as it wavered.
At first glance, the shelter looked like nothing more than a door stuck into a mountain. In reality, it was dug deep inside like a mine. There was only one entrance and exit, utterly enclosedâbut precisely because it was so enclosed, it was safe.
Such shelters were common in Hanyang, and Hoeun had practiced evacuating to them countless times.
Around the shelter lay all the usual remnants of carnage. The ground was littered with dried blood, torn clothes, severed flesh. And yet curiously, there was no smell. Likely the ceaseless wind that poured from every direction carried it away.
Andâthere were cars. Not the newest models, but cars nonetheless. Each one worth more than an ordinary household, now desecrated by gore. Some were soaked in blood, some dented, some with glass smashed through. People had fled here in them, clearly.
By some miracle, there were no monsters. This wasnât like the hospitalâopen on all sides. Here, once the steel door closed, no silhouette escaped, no sound leaked. The monsters likely didnât even know people were inside.
As Hoeun panted for air, Seong-im began toward the door. He hurried ahead of her.
âI⊠hhh⊠Iâll go⊠first.â
It wasnât because she couldnât speak. Nor out of pride. He simply⊠felt he had to.
His stumbling steps brought him to the shelter entrance. The door was iron, rust crawling across its age. Heavy. Solid. Dark blood smeared thick across it, but that wasnât unusualâeverywhere in Ramjae was.
ââŠFuuuh.â
Hoeun straightened, slicked back his disordered hair, tugged his wrinkled clothes flat.
He had to make a good impression. The shelter was surely full already. To them, the three of them would be nothing but intruders. He must be humble, he must ask politely.
The door bore a round metal knocker, the join crafted with a Taeguk design. Likely used both to pull the door open and to announce a visitorâs presence. Hoeun lifted it, then let it fall.
THONK, THONK, THONK.
He startled. The sound rang far louder than expected. He glanced back in fearâa noise like that might draw monsters. But all he saw, all he heard, was wind shrieking.
ââŠ.â
He turned back to the door. No answer from inside. Perhaps it was too late, they slept? Even in a fortified shelter, surely someone kept watch? Frowning, he struck again. Thunk, thunk, thunk! This time came a reply.
SCREECHHâclaaangâSCREEEEK.
Hoeun stepped back, heart clenching. But the door had not opened. Only a small square hatch within it, two palms wide. Bars of heavy iron crossed it tight: even if someone tried, they wouldnât squeeze a head through.
Inside was litâlamplight flickered. And a face appeared.
âWho goes there?â
The man looked about Hoeunâs age, dressed in hanbok and wearing a gat. Oddâit ought to be cramped within, five hundred people crushed together, and yet one sat in such restrictive formality.
Hoeun hastened to bow.
âGreetings.â
ââŠ.â
The man glanced at him oddly. This was hardly a time or place for pleasantries. Hoeun forced a nervous smile, still uncertain how to begin.
âAh⊠Would there be room left, by chance?â
âWhat business have you?â
The reply stung him silent for a beat. What business? Why else? With the beasts swarming, they had come seeking shelter. But Hoeun swallowed frustration and answered softly.
âWe are seeking refuge. We escaped the hospital when monsters surged there.â
ââŠ.â
âThere are not many of us. Just threeâone child, one woman, and myself.â
ââŠ.â
The man squinted, eyes radiating suspicion. Hoeun felt sweat gather, kept glancing nervously behind lest monsters hear their noise.
âWhy do you speak so? You from Hanyang?â
âHanyangâŠ?â
âI asked if you are outsiders.â
âAh. Yes. We are.â
âAnd why do outsiders seek entry here?â
ââŠIs there a law that bans outsiders from entering a shelter?â
Hoeun askedâgently, earnestly. Not in protestâsimply, if such a law existed, he truly wished to know. Foolish, perhaps. But shelters were surely built by townsfolk themselves. If they restricted them to local use, what could he argue?
The man smirked. Almost mocking.
âThe shelterâs full. Find elsewhere.â
âWhat? But⊠the west shelter is impossibleâthe monsters swarm there.â
âNo space here. Not even enough for one more seatâhow could we fit three?â
ââŠ.â
Hoeunâs fingers fidgeted helplessly. So he had fearedâit was full. What now? His thoughts scrambled. And then voices erupted within.
âWhat noise so late?â
âSomeoneâs come.â
âSomeone? Familiar?â
âNot familiarâoutsiders!â
The young man vanished. Another figure appearedâolder, maybe forty, also shadowed beneath a gat.
ââŠ.â
He pushed his hat back, face pressing close to the hatch, glaring straight at Hoeun. Hoeun held his eyes, silent, determined to show his sincerity.
âYouâare you noble born?â
The question startled Hoeun as much as the first. Still he nodded honestly.
âYes. I am.â
âWhose son?â
ââŠMust I say?â
His brows knit at last. He bore not the slightest shame in his lineage, yet hereâhere in this foul circumstance, he loathed to name it.
The manâs face twisted and he barked:
âIf you wonât tell, begone!â
He shoved the latch, ready to slam the window. Panic stirred Hoeunâs tongue.
âI am the youngest son of the Choi family of Gyeongju.â
ââŠ.â
The man froze. Blinked, startled. Then whispered to those behind. The Chois� Which Chois? The Choi family of Gyeongju. The wealthiest house in the Korean Empire. The richest of them all.
Listening, Hoeunâs lips tightened. Their prattle displeased him, but worseâsoon the older man leaned close again, nose nearly jutting between the iron bars.
âHow do we know you tell truth?â
ââŠPardon?â
âThese days, disorder reigns. Iâve heard tales of common trash pretending noble.â
ââŠ.â
âThough⊠your face, hm. Not likely false.â
His eyes roved rudely over Hoeun. Skin porcelain-pale, untouched by sun. A countenance flowing with wealth. Clothes costly, silks even blood and dirt could not conceal. And even as he merely stood, from every movement radiated nobility, poise. Clearly nobleborn.
The man stared long. Then shifted his gaze to Jung-woo cradled in his arms, and then to Seong-im behind. His eyes lingered too long, crawling. Disgust burned Hoeunâs chest. He stepped sideways, body shielding her.
âIf you doubt, question me inside. But let us in first. The monsters could arrive.â
ââŠ.â
The man chewed his lips, debating. Then tilted his chin with false generosity.
âYou may enter.â
ââŠWhat?â
Hoeun blinked. Surely heâd misheard.
âYou alone.â
ââŠ.â
His brow creased. He tilted his head slightly. Then asked quietly, confirming:
âYou meanâyouâll only accept one?â
So after all, his warning was right: no room for three. Thenâit should be Jung-woo who entered. Or⊠wait. If they could take him, surely Seong-im and the child could squeeze in as well. Hope flickered. But the manâs reply cut it out.
âNo. Only you. Only the noble.â
ââŠ.â
Hoeunâs lips shut slowly. A breath in, a breath out. His shoulders rose and fell with it. A long silence passed. Then his voice, low, quiet, heavy:
ââŠInsideâare only nobles?â
âAye.â
âAnd why?â
âHow could we possibly eat and sleep in one space with common trash?â
ââŠ.â
The answer was absurd, grotesque. Yet Hoeun did not scoff, nor rebuke. For he had glimpsed something vast and black behind itâthe shadow of miseries yet to come.