Chapter 341 - Chapter 36, Episode 2: Are You Happy?
Chapter 341: Chapter 36, Episode 2: Are You Happy?
Mrs. Ha Dong, who was watching, blew her nose on her apron, and Deok San wiped away her tears with her ribbon.
âThat lucky brat, she ruined her own makeup despite all that fuss she causedâŠâ
When Deok San heard that her daughterâs manager had forcibly conducted a body search on her in the office until she was naked once the bus returned to the warehouse, she screamed. Although her heart was in pieces, she didnât have it in her to stop her daughter from working. They didnât have a single bit of land. If she stopped working, how would they survive and pay off her husbandâs hospital bills?
After Mu Ssang came to visit, their dark household turned bright. Her husband, who had been bedridden for several years, managed to stand. They could work on Old Jin Boâs land without having to pay rent. They had asked their daughter to stop working as a bus conductor, but their daughter refused.
She stubbornly persisted until she fell off the platform and broke her leg while dozing off. The company had claimed no responsibility. They said as much as it was her mistake, they couldnât pay for her hospital treatment. Ultimately, they had to use the money that Kyung Soon had saved up to pay for her hospital treatment. Her injured leg had healed, but the admission fee that had to be paid right away became a problem. They began to feel sorrow as several memories resurfaced.
âHey, sis!â
âYa!â
âTake this.â
Ha Dong Daek handed her a bankbook and seal.
âWhat is this?â
âItâs Sang Chulâs rent account that Ssang entrusted me. He wants you to use it to pay off Jum Soonâs school fees.â
âWhat?â
Deok Sanâs eyes grew wide like a cowâs. What kind of front-kicking ox story was that?
âItâs not for free. He said the amount needs to be recompensed, as much as itâs loaned out once Jum Soon finishes school.â
âReally?â
âHave you been fooled your whole life? Thereâs even interest. He said he wants you to give Old Jin Boâs grave a greeting with soju every Daeboreum[1] and eighth month. Ssangâs often overseas.â
âUhhhu, sis!â
Deok San clung to Ha Dong Daek as she cried. Her daughter had to hit the iron plate and shout âAlrightâ while all of the kids her age went to school carrying their school bags. Her heart ached because her daughter never got the chance to board the bus.
âWhyâre you crying on me? Thank Ssang instead.â
âOf course, I should. For a young man, I donât know how he can be so considerate.â
âHeâs Choong Muâs[2] son, isnât he? You know how kind-hearted that woman is. Whoo,â Ha Dong let out a deep sigh.
Just thinking about Choong Mu pained her heart. Her son had grown up to be such an amazing person, but where had the woman disappeared to!
âOi, Jum Soon, you brat, is oppa yours? Whyâre you clinging on to him?â
Gye Soon and Mal Soon rushed over and dragged Jum Soon by the back of her clothes, away from him. A smile rose on Mu Ssangâs face. That was the leverage effect mentioned in the Book of Changes: âOne must be tougher on themselves during difficult times.â
Sam Chul ajussiâs family had fallen into a pit of poverty but managed to climb out of it the moment a foothold presented itself. It was because of his healthy family. A healthy family developed their own strength as long as there was an escape route.
Mu Ssang had never thrown a coin at those mendicants. Those who didnât work didnât deserve to eat. There werenât enough laborers in Paris to the point that the city hall would have been covered in trash and the Seine would have been filled with s**t if not for the Turks.
In all of Europe, the country with the largest number of illegal immigrants and asylum seekers was France. It was because they were rather tolerant of progressive immigration policies and illegal immigrants. They said it was because they valued human rights and freedom, but truly, it was because they required people to do manual labor jobs.
The mendicants in Paris could find a job whenever they wanted to. They could get a job immediately if they asked the employment center operated by the Employment Policy Bureau. If they didnât like their job, they could apply again, up to three times. Still, the mendicants couldnât abandon the beggar-like habits that theyâve picked up. He didnât have a reason to look back at those who refused when an opportunity was presented to them.
Whatâs even funnier was that most of the mendicants in Paris raised dogs as a means of operating their business. It was never a large dog but a puppy. Their business strategy involved a chubby young puppy, a large paper cup or a dented silver plate, and a dirty fedora or a bowler.
Those beggars had reasons for raising dogs. Firstly, it was to avoid getting fined. In France, those who abandoned their pets would receive a harsh punishment. The police would have to assume responsibility for the dogs if they wanted to arrest the beggars. It was difficult to assume responsibility for the dogs, and if rumors of dog abuse spread during the arrest, the police would be put in a difficult position. Of course, arrests grew infrequent.
Secondly, the dogs were used as a substitute for a heater when the weather was cold. Hugging them in the morning and evening during wintertime turned them into a useful bio-heater. Thirdly, when an unemployed person raised a dog, the regional office would provide pet subsidies. That money, no, the dogâs money would become theirs.
Lastly, they were used to amplify sympathy. Compassionate people would worry if those beggars would starve their dogs. They would give those beggars money so that they could buy dog food. The beggars in Paris were basically running a business. The Paris mendicants who lived off the money passersby threw into their fedora were very unlikely to stop their business. Mu Ssang called those beggars âbusinessmen without services.â
When he was little, his mother would offer food to the visiting beggars, but his father said he would pay them if they helped him sow the farm or pull out some onions. Still, there wasnât a single beggar who agreed to work and get paid. His father didnât budge despite his motherâs scoldings.
Ssang, the worst b*stards in the world are thieves and the most pathetic people in the world are beggars. B*stards who try to fill their stomachs without working are b*stards with rotten minds. If your mind is rotten, no matter how healthy you are, you become a useless person.
He learned from his father that there was nothing free in the world. The reason why Mu Ssang hated free-riders that much was also because of the countless beggars he had witnessed in his youth. They could only be beggars and nothing more.
âAjussi, are you happy?â Mu Ssang asked out of nowhere.
âOf course, Iâm happy. I feel like Iâm finally living life nowadays.â
A smile lit up on Sam Chul ajussiâs face.
âWhy are you happy? Ajussi, you need to rely on a walking stick and have no savings.â
âLook at my daughters laughing. Damn, you have no idea how happy I am. I used to be paralyzed because of my broken back, but now I can walk, I have land that I can work on, and a daughter who is attending school next year. Thatâs enough to be happy about. Isnât happiness determined by how much you can achieve without relying on others but yourself?â
The corners of Mu Ssangâs mouth curled up.
Happiness is the condition of being human!
Happiness wasnât a matter of âwhereâ but âhow.â Happiness was a very subjective concept of self-realization. If one searched for happiness relying on the perspective of others, they would be like a bluebird in search of happiness until they died. If he looked at his life subjectively, the positive satisfaction called happiness was already within him.
Sam Chul ajussi, who became disabled because of his leg, answered back with âhowâ when asked what determined oneâs happiness. Happiness wasnât a zero-sum game called âyour sadness is my happiness.â It was a pie game in which everyone involved had to be happy. If the pie grew in size, everyoneâs portion of the pie would increase too.
Happiness was a by-product obtained from an individualâs efforts to preserve existence and life. In the end, the logic of living to be happy was wrong, and the logic of being happy to live was right. In the end, Mu Ssangâs compassionate heart for others was his form of happiness.
Mu Ssang suddenly felt like he had an awakening. Instead of worrying about the future, there was happiness in living fully in the present. One of the questions he had been constantly thinking about finally received an answer.
Jin Soon led her siblings into the temple to start the large-scale temple and side building clean-up. They had to quickly clean first before the event could commence.
âYeon Soon, take Jum Soon with you and bring out all the laundry. Gye Soon, you grab the broom, Ou Soon, grab the rag, and Kyung Soon and Mal Soon, head to the main prayer room. We need to clean up quickly and get ready.â
She ordered her siblings around busily like a veteran officer on the field. When seven girls started moving around, the peaceful temple soon turned into a marketplace.
âSister, you really raised your five daughters well. Once Gye Soon enters next year, you will have three college students. God, youâre the only person in Jipoon village to successfully send your children to university. Itâs all due to the good fortune youâve accumulated.â
âUniversity is impossible for someone of my ability. Itâs all because of Ssang. What fortune? Iâve done nothingâŠâ
Ha Dong grew embarrassed because of Deok Sanâs praise.
âWhen Mr. Park teamed up with the In-Dongâs[3] to run over Choong Mu, only you and your husband cared to do something about it. I couldnât say a single thing because I was scared of being bullied. Iâm really ashamed before Ssang, you know. If Iâd cared a little bit, Mrs. Choong Mu wouldnât have run away. Weâre all in the same difficult situation, Iâve no idea why they did such a thing⊠the In-Dongâs will receive heavenâs punishment one day.â
âItâs all in the past. Mrs. Choong Mu will be happy since Ssang grew up so fine. We should do all the hard work. Those brats should lead better lives than us.â Ha Dong stared at the kids who were chattering.
âOf course. We donât mind suffering as long as our children can live better lives.â
âThatâs true. Jin Soon asked me to prepare a few dishes. Letâs go make some jeon and bake some beans or prepare fruits in the kitchen.â
âYou think itâll be okay to let the temple smell like oil?â
âActually, that wonât do. The monk might not care about worldly matters, but we should still keep to the rules.â
âBut, Ssang has to eat a lot of meat.â
âWe can just make some snacks for the event or have something those brats are preparing. We can have dinner at the bridge village.â
âAh, youâre planning to cook the seaweed soup at your house too?â
âYeah. Meat goes in seaweed soup too.â
âThen, thereâs nothing to do. You take a break, sis.â
Deok San patted her apron down and entered the kitchen.
âOld man, I couldnât find the b*stards who tortured you because I went overseas. You said the b*stards who were in Sabukâs Martial Law Division were called Kim Young No, Yoo Young Chul, and Jang Gye Jang, right?â
âGosh, nephew, they arenât police officers but government officials. You know how prideful they are. Iâve forgotten everything. Nephew, youâve so much to do. Donât mind such things.â
Surprised, Sam Chul ajussi raised his hands and shook them. He was a simple farmer who could live without laws but got scared when the governmentâs power was involved. That made dictatorship possible and allowed trashes to use their moderate power as beating sticks.
âHaha, okay.â
Heâd answered to relive the manâs worries, but he still felt unsatisfied. A stick that beat up civilians under the guise of government duty, and officials, who were accustomed to bribes and gainsâthose were all something he had experienced. He wanted to cause a scene, but that wasnât the Sahel.
He wouldnât get caught in the Sahel even if he shook things around, but there were many obstacles in Korea. There was Ha Dong, his mother, his elders at the Ahchim village, and Mina. If possible, he wanted to live quietly as Mu Ssang and not Black Mamba.
Thereâs no choice if the wind keeps shaking the branches.
His mouth loosened into a cold smile. Although he couldnât flip the entire thing around, he didnât intend to overlook the pile of s**t in front of him.
That was the time of the year when daylight was the shortest. Suddenly, the day grew dark. The tables were prepared in the side building. Covering all the walls were banners and decorations that the girls had brought over. They even prepared a four-tiered cake and mini fireworks. A tear formed in the corner of her eye. Although she had been helpless when she was young, she still found it upsetting that her oppa couldnât live for himself.
âUnni, Iâm done. Bring oppa over.â
Yeon Soon pushed Jin Soon outside. Jin Soon made her way to the meditating rock. As she predicted, oppa was sitting on the rock like a still object. The snow had accumulated on his head and shoulders. Jin Soon hesitated to call him. Her oppa, who was currently meditating, seemed like an otherworldly person.
âOppa!â
Mu Ssangâs eyes flashed open.
Whooshâ
The snow that had accumulated on his head and shoulders scattered on its own.
âDinnerâs ready?â
She hadnât seen him move but heard him speak as though he was right beside her. Jin Soon wasnât even surprised. The monk and oppa were people with mysterious abilities.
âMm, were you thinking about auntie?â
âHm!â
âSheâll be fine. Grandpa monk told you not to worry, didnât he?â
âOf course, sheâll be fine. If she isnâtâŠâ
Mu Ssangâs eyes glowed in red. Jin Soon grabbed Mu Ssangâs hands tightly.
âOppa, since your exams are over, Iâll help you too.â
âIâm thinking of several ways.â
âThink about them later, and take care of yourself. Ajussi and mom are waiting for you.â
âReally? Letâs hurry. I feel like my backâs on my stomach.â
âIn the blue water of the Duman River⊠Hic!â
Sang Chul, who was completely drunk, walked out of Yeongok village. His friend, whoâd married a little late, had organized a 100-days-old celebration party for his daughter. The after-effects of drinking several bottles of Kumbokju and beer slowly crept over him. Sang Chul, who had been singing joyfully, suddenly stopped.
âWhat are those b*stards doing?â
He saw five shadows climbing the mountain under the moonlight.
âWhat strange b*stards. Are they planning to sell herbs, climbing in the middle of the night?â
Sang Chul tilted his head and continued on his way. Whether others climbed the mountain at night or picked their ears with a pole, that wasnât any of his concern.
âOver and over our comradesâ corpses⊠My comrades who fell like petals, I bid you goodbyeâŠâ
A military song, which was off-beat and off-pitch, continued playing around the corner of the mountain.
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Translatorâs Note: In Korea, people living in rural areas are referred to by their place of birth. âHa Dongâ and âDeok Sanâ are village namesâwhere the characters were bornâand not their names. For instance, the Soon sisters cannot be referred to as âMs. Deok Sanâ since they were born on Jipoon bridge. Theyâd be referred to as âMs. Jipoon.â For example, if you were born in Washington, youâll be referred to as âMrs. from Washingtonâ or âMrs. Washington.â
[1] Daeboreum is a Korean holiday that celebrates the first full moon of the new year of the lunar Korean calendar. It is the Korean version of the First Full Moon Festival.
[2] A title.
[3] The name of the region where the gang originated from.