MTO C47
by berryChapter 47
âWhat kind of wager will it be?â
Michel grinned as he asked. Heart glared daggers at him, but he didnât turn away.
âJwiâmyeoneuri hunting.â
âJwiâmyeoneuri? You mean the insect?â
Michel remembered from his boyhood the tiny pillâbugs, rolling into tight black balls he used to catch with friends near the parish yard. But now? In this winter? Could they even survive?
Heart smirked triumphantly, pleased at Michelâs confusion.
âIdiot. Jwiâmyeoneuri is a forest fruit. Whoever gathers more by the time limit wins.â
Michel couldnât hide his admiration. Clever boy. Indeed, such a contest skewed heavily toward Heartâwho for years had survived by scouring forests for food. Michel himself, not even knowing it was a fruit, had lost before starting.
Can I even win this?
Doubt swelled, but refusal wasnât an option. If he tried to change the terms, Heart would abandon the wager outright.
âAll right. But we each get training time. At least let me learn what these berries look like, otherwise it wonât be fair. Agreed?â
Heart rolled his eyes, clearly confident Michel could never catch up, and at last nodded. Then he stretched out a hand for the saintâs token. Michel lifted a finger instead.
âOne condition. Until the match, you eat at every meal Barbara brings. Doesnât have to be downstairs, but you will eat.â
âWhy should I?â
âBecause I wonât duel a frail, fainting child. If you collapse midâmatch, what then? I intend to win fair and square.â
At the word âfrail,â Heartâs eyes sharpened like arrowheads.
âDonât mock me! I never collapse!â
Michel only arched a brow. When he made as if to pocket the token again, Heart panicked.
âFine!â
Thank heaven he was still young enough to be baited. Finally Michel handed over the token. Held it close, Heart seemed strangely unsettled.
âWe have a deal?â
Michel raised a hand for a sealing highâfive. But Heart stormed past, yanking open the door, unwilling to endure even one second longer.
âThe wagerâs in a week! Donât forget!â
Michel shouted after him, undaunted. The boy sped down the hall and was gone.
âThe jwiâmyeoneuri looks like this.â
Barbara slid a sketch toward him. Michel leaned close. The berry resembled blueberries; small, clustered like grapes. Find the right tree, and the task would be easyâor so he thought.
âAre they common in these forests?â
âYes, butâŠâ Barbara sighed. âThey ripen in summer.â
ââŠWhat?â
She explained.
âBy autumn theyâre gone. In winter, none grow at all.â
David whistled, shaking his head. âYouâve been outfoxed, Saint.â
Michel stared blankly at the drawing. Felt like a cookingâpot slammed the back of his head. Once againâplayed for a fool.
âBut⊠but then Heart canât find any either, right?â
âThe husks are thick. Sometimes fallen ones remain under snow till winter. Last year Heart collected more than a hundred himself.â
Impossible. A hundred? Then he wasnât a boy, but a squirrel. Barbaraâs expression, however, was far too grave.
âDonât worry, Sister,â David said with sly smile. âSurely our reverend saint will devise a brilliant counterâstrategy.â
Michel croaked: ââŠI will practice. A lot.â
But David merely nodded as if Michel had pledged to battle armies.
âI shall inform the Duke to prepare for your return in disgrace.â
âNo! Absolutely not!â
Michel lunged for David, shaking him madly by the shoulders.
âTrust me! Once upon a time, they called me the flying squirrel of Inwang Mountain! King of autumn chestnutâpicking contests!â
âIf you are a flying squirrel, then that child is lord of all squirrels. Every nut and berry in Valois forest is within his grasp.â
Michel squinted suspiciously. ââŠAre you mocking me?â
âHow could I mock a saint? Merely a humble guard offering advice.â
âThen why are you smiling like that?â
While the two bickered noisily, Barbara sat silent, lips pressed thin. Some heavy thought clouded her. Michel let David go, glanced worried. Had he overstepped, drawn her ire?
âSister⊠donât worry. Iâll win. By any means, Iâll stay here.â
âNo, itâs not thatâŠâ She startled, flapping her hands, then gave a weary smile. âYou said the match is in one week? Thatâs the childrenâs birthday.â
âChildren? You mean the twins, Dan and Max?â
Barbara shook her head.
âMost orphans donât know their true birthdays. They were far too young when they arrived to remember the date. So every year we celebrate together on New Yearâs Day.â
âI see⊠New Year already.â
David muttered the words softly.
Michel had not realized. But now that he did, he could not ignore it. For him, as Michel, this would be the childrenâs first birthday celebration under his care. It had to be grand.
âThen weâll hold a birthday party! A proper one!â
Barbara blinked. âA⊠party?â New word to her ears.
âYes! If I win the wager, Heart will join in too. Weâll prepare presents, candles for the cake! How do folks in Valois celebrate usually?â
âWell⊠we decorate with starâshaped charms. And the birthday child receives a red cloak, because for one day, they are king.â
âPerfect. Weâll have star ornaments! Cloaks! Weâve money, donât we?â
Thank Kaidan and his donation. The relief festival meant funds now spilled like treasure. This year would be no mere sliver of pieâit would blaze a true feast.
âThen this match, you must win,â David said fiercely, echoing his thoughts.
âOf course! Sisterâwhat do you think?â
Barbara blinked at being asked directly for her say, then smiled shyly.
âThe children will be overjoyed.â
So began preparations: Michelâs frantic fruitâforaging practice and the childrenâs first true birthday party.
Every dawn he trudged into the woods after exercise, charting terrain, seeking caches of fallen berries. Sometimes he brought the children. Their eyes discovered what his missed: snake skins, sparrow tracks, melting icicles, cracked eggshells. Proof of Saint Pabloâs wordsâthat in natureâs play, all could learn.
But still, not one berry. Only a dried husk Oliver once found.
âAnimals would have eaten every kernel long ago,â the boy said gravely.
Sweat prickled Michelâs doubt. Yet he clenched determination. If it was impossible for him, it would not be easy for Heart either. The field was equal.
At leastâHeart had started to eat. Barbara brewed a special soup, chopping morsels small. He did not empty every bowl, but no trace appeared dumped outside. Leon whispered quietly to Michel, âHe is eating now.â
That alone fueled his perseverance.
The party preparations went smoothly. The children grew giddy. Nightly before sleep they asked, âHow many days till our birthday?â Each morning they awoke chanting the countdown anew.
Meanwhile, workers mended the broken window cracked during Heartâs escape. Thin blankets were replaced with plush furs, faded curtains laundered and rehung.
Golden and silver ribbons twined along stair rails. Bright star ornaments hung on walls. Some children even sat transfixed beneath the great star, refusing to move all day.
Thus days passed, quick as arrows, overflowing with hope and expectation.
Footnotes
- âJwiâmyeoneuriâ fruit (ì„ë©°ë늏) â In Korean, the term usually means pillâbug, but here recontextualized as a forest berry. This doubleâmeaning fools Michel.