Yun Yeong-Minâs trembling eyes were now fixed on Yi Ji-Hyuk.
What the freaking hell? Why was this dude acting like this now?
âMister Yi Ji-Hyuk, I wasnât talking to you, but to Choi Jung-Hoon.â (President)
âIâm gonna ask again. So, like, I can leave now, right?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âOf course you canât.â (President)
What will we do if you leave, too?
Canât you see everything weâve been talking about has to do with you? (Presidentâs inner monologue)
âI donât have anything to do here.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âBut, the Americans are requesting for your assistance right now?â (President)
âBuuut, Iâm not planning to go?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âReally? You really arenât going?â (President)
âYup, I ainât going.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Min ended up smirking right then.
Enough was enough â just how lightly was he being thought of here?
Anyone with even a passing interest in the matter would know that Yi Ji-Hyuk held a favourable view of Christopher McLaren, and that he had been helping the Americans without hesitation up until now.
So, did he really think that such a threat would work in this case?
âMister Yi Ji-Hyuk. Iâm aware that youâll answer their request for aid anyway.â (President)
âWho said so?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âWhy donât we stop wasting each otherâs energy over something unnecessary? What is it that you want?â (President)
âI said, who said something like that?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âExcuse me?â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk leaned his back against the couch and fished out a cigarette from his pocket. Chief Secretary saw that and spoke while extending his hand awkwardly.
âSmoking isnât allowed in here.â (Chief Secretary)
âSo what?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk asked back in an unimpressed tone of voice, prompting an immediate turn-around in the Chief Secretaryâs attitude.
âHereâs your ashtray.â (Chief Secretary)
He quickly found a brand-new ashtray and handed it over as an outpouring of sharp, criticising glares landed on him. However, Chief Secretary remained unperturbed as he kept his head up.
So what if I did?? All of you canât say anything either, so why are you glaring at me for? (Chief Secretary)
Click.
Yi Ji-Hyuk lit his cigarette up.
âHah, seriously now.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
He took a long, long drag before puffing out the smoke. Frowning deeply now, he shifted his gaze back to Yun Yeong-Min.
âSo, you want us to stop wasting our energy on unnecessary matters, is that it?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Min didnât reply. It vaguely felt as if he had said something he shouldnât, and that led to the young man feeling pretty unhappy right now, but the President of South Korea couldnât figure out just where he made a slip of the tongue.
âThat isâŚ. ehâŚ.â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk looked at the stuttering Yun Yeong-Min with eyes reserved for when staring at an idiot, before breaking out in a smirk.
A geezer like that was the President of this nation?
He had seen his fair share of wise rulers, and just as many despots, too. And he also saw enough terrible rulers utterly driving their nations into the ground.
However, one would still be hard-pressed to find a dude like this one when it came to those occupying the position of âkingâ.
You see, no matter how much of a dumba* one was, the process of inheriting the throne would pretty much filter out the absolute worst of the lot. Whether one was a wise, benevolent ruler or a tyrant, they were still in many ways far more excellent than regular people.
You ask, why did such excellent people end up as tyrants?
Because the position of âkingâ came with unspeakable amounts of stress, that was why.
Now you wouldnât normally find a king becoming a moron as soon as he ascended to the throne. They would hang around for two, maybe three years before going kablooey in the head after being unable to cope with the stress, and end up as a proper lost cause. That was the normal chain of events.
Driving a nation into the ground was not something any regular Joe could even try. Things like that only happened because the âkingâ possessed the type of drive incomparable to what regular people had.
If that drive was heading in a âgoodâ direction, that would become a grand achievement, and if it unfolded in a bad direction, then itâd be recorded as another dark moment in history.
However, this so-called President was neither of those.
When in water, be like water; when in alcohol, then be like alcohol.
It was so, so easy to see this guyâs attitude of doing nothing but watching other people do their stuff, quietly avoiding any collateral damage before looking for a way to sneakily get himself a slice of the pie. And that was getting on Yi Ji-Hyukâs nerves.
âHow did a dude like this become a President??â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Was the election rigged or something?
His lips twitched hard with the desire to ask, but he knew not to say stuff like that in front of the person in question. Well, Yi Ji-Hyuk was a rather sensible man, after all.
âYou are so right. I donât want to waste my energy with unnecessary things, so I ainât going. Itâs not like something good will happen to me if I do go, anyway.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Minâs eyes widened greatly.
This man was being dead serious?
But, that couldnât be. His logic said that Yi Ji-Hyuk was either currently insane or simply putting on airs. That was all.
But, even thenâŚ.
He knew that South Koreaâs position was different compared to the past. He also understood that Yi Ji-Hyuk was the one and only, impossible-to-figure-out, most important resource in the entire world.
Even then, he shouldnât be ignoring the request sent by the big shot from America.
What kind of a nation was the United States of America?
Whether it be financial or military, it was the only nation that could wipe the floor with their enemies even if the whole world decided to go after them.
It was indeed not an exaggeration to call the current era âPax Americanaâ.
The worldâs system was created with America as its centre, and the system itself was designed for America.
Sure, South Korea might enjoy much higher acclaim nowadays, but itâd be crazy to think that it now stood on an equal footing with the U.S.
Definitely.
2
But, surely, one should still be able to put on some airs since Yi Ji-Hyuk was a necessity in dealing with the monster threats?
Indeed, that was why the Korean government (or its President, at least) was putting on airs right now.
Such as, when requests came in, theyâd beat around the bush for a bit before saying okay, and then rip the other party off with enormous monetary compensation under the pretext of sending Yi Ji-Hyuk over.
Compared to the past when they had to give up a portion of the land and do whatever the Americans wanted without any compensation whatsoever, one could call the current situation a âsea changeâ.
However, to go even further than this?
âNo, that must not happen.â (President)
If economic sanctions were imposed tomorrow, the Republic of Korea would be finished instantly. This country was just too intrinsically tied to the U.S. in terms of economy and military. If the Americans decided to sanction them, then Korea would crumble in a single moment.
Of course, the U.S. would suffer some damages, too. However, one couldnât compare a finger getting lobbed off to a head being cut off, now could you?
This young man should be aware of this already, so whyâŚ.
âAre you really not going?â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk tilted his head at an oblique angle.
âYep.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âHave you thought about how much suffering the citizens might endure because of your actions?â (President)
âHey, ahjussi.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Min frowned deeply.
After hearing that for a while, he was now getting properly riled up. Just who in their right minds would keep calling a President âahjussiâ?
âIâm asking this cuz I just canât figure this one out.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
What was he trying to say now?
âIs being a politician all about clinging onto a single citizen and nagging him to do this and that?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
ââŚ..â
âIsnât politics originally supposed to make sure that the citizens donât end up doing what they donât want to do in the first place? And when overseas people demand your citizens to go out there and put their lives on the line, shouldnât the leader of the nation take the lead in casting a shield to protect his people from such unfairness? Or am I wrong?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Min shut his mouth.
What Yi Ji-Hyuk said had accurately pointed out the core of the subtle battle of wills that were taking place until now.
In principle, there was no real reason for Yi Ji-Hyuk to go overseas to lend his aid. Under the situation where the nationâs government didnât possess the forceful means to send him overseas, him actually going there to help out in the name of ânational interest of Koreaâ was solely out of his own decision and no one could say anything about it.
âB-but, Mister Yi Ji-HyukâŚ.â (President)
âYou can keep your buts for all I care.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk didnât feel like listening to Yun Yeong-Minâs rubbish any longer.
âSo, like, after I went over to the States the last two times, what nice things happened to me? Do you know?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âWell, the benefit to the whole nationâŚ.â (President)
âForget about benefiting the nation and tell me straight, how was I benefited from going there?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Min couldnât answer. More specifically, he didnât know the answer.
He only had to worry about the national interest. Why should he worry about what sort of benefit Yi Ji-Hyuk received through those events?
Honestly speaking, this was not his fault. Which President out there would think about such things in this world, anyway?
The thing was, a President had a c**p ton of things to do, which was different from what most people might envision. So, wouldnât it be completely impossible for a President to look after every single citizen out there while also performing his official duties, now would it?
âI, Iâm not too sureâŚ.â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyukâs eyes narrowed down to a slit.
âNothing good happened, you see?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
It was then, the Chief Secretary raised his hand.
âWhatâs wrong now?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âBut, I heard that you have received quite a significant amount of monetary compensation so far?â (Chief Secretary)
âI never needed it, though?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âPardon?â (Chief Secretary)
âI realised that thereâs this thing with money. Once it gets past a certain amount, it just becomes zeroes in the bank account and nothing much will change with my life. You see?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
But, how could that be true?
If that was the case, why did the CEOs and Chairpersons of huge corporations work their butts off, then?
The more money you had, the better you felt about it, and youâd grow even more avaricious in accruing greater wealth.
âI donât need any of that.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
ââŚâŚâŚ.â
Well, if the guy himself said that, what could anyone do?
âSo, like I was saying, I donât get to see much of a benefit for myself after going over there to help out, you know?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Minâs complexion grew poorer and poorer.
âA citizen working for oneâs nation isnât for the sake of profit for himself, am I wrong?â (President)
âWhy donât you refund your salary and donate all your wealth back to society first before talking to me?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
ââŚâŚâŚ.â
âBusy yapping on about some stupid nonsense here. If youâre so desperate to work for your country, you should set an example first by giving up all your wealth to the nationâs tax coffers or something. Why are you demanding something that you arenât willing to do yourself? Busy p*ssing me off.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
The corners of Yun Yeong-Minâs eyes began twitching uncontrollably.
This⌠didnât sound wrong, logically speaking, yet why did he feel so terrible after listening to these words?
âSo, you donât want to do it?â (President)
âYes.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âChief Secretary!â (President)
âSir?â (Chief Secretary)
The Chief Secretary awkwardly stepped forward.
âWhat kind of legal punishment is available for a person refusing to obey the Presidential order issued for the national interest?â (President)
The Chief Secretary hesitated and stuttered greatly, apparently at a loss as to what to say next, before spotting the Presidentâs eyes.
What is up with those sparkling eyes??
Have you gone insane, too? (Chief Secretaryâs inner monologue)
âT-there is no such thing, sir.â (Chief Secretary)
âThere is none?â (President)
âOf course, sir. There is no such law!â (Chief Secretary)
ââŚ.Ah, so there isnât one?â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk facepalmed.
This is definitely the Blue House, so whyâŚ.
Wait, maybe Iâm at the wrong address?
I never imagined Iâd be having such a conversation inside the Blue House, thoughâŚ. (Yi Ji-Hyukâs inner monologue)
âHahâŚ.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
In any case, politicians would always be the same regardless of what era it was.
âWhatever. Iâm not going, so do whatever you want. Well then, have a nice day.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âW-where do you think youâre going?!â (President)
âHome.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âBut, we havenât finished talking here!â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk smirked derisively.
âHey, ah, ju, ssi~.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
ââŚâŚâŚâ
âYou talk to a lawyer about the legal stuff, and when you want to talk to a chairman, you go through his secretary first. So, if you wanna talk to me, you shouldnât try to contact me directly first, no?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âI-in that case?â (President)
Yi Ji-Hyuk shifted his gaze over in a certain direction.
âAhâŚ.â (President)
And Yun Yeong-Min ended up seeing it, too.
He saw the dark aura emitted by someone he previously thought of as nothing more than an unimportant âpasserby civil servant No.1â.
âM-Mister Choi Jung-Hoon??â (President)
Grin.
Choi Jung-Hoon smiled oh-so brightly and looked back at Yun Yeong-Min.
Was the latter completely mistaken when he immediately took that smile as âYou told me to scram earlier so why are you pretending to be so chummy now, you stinking geezerâ?
Choi Jung-Hoon ignored the President and instead looked at Yi Ji-Hyuk. The latter understood what the former was saying with those eyes and simply grinned in reply.
Okay, got you.
âIf you wanna say something to me, leave it with this dude here first. Heâs like my proxy and stuff, you see?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
ââŚâŚâŚ..â
âI ainât gonna answer any direct calls. You saw how Christopher McLaren also calls him first, right? If you keep bothering me, Iâll just leave.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yun Yeong-Minâs shoulders drooped powerlessly; he turned around to face Choi Jung-Hoon next. When the latter met the formerâs gaze, he grinned brightly again and opened his lips to speak.
âWell, then. As you have ordered me earlier, I shall leave as well, Mister President.â (Choi Jung-Hoon)
This dudeâs still so good at ending on a high note.
<257. Uh? Does that mean I can leave, too? -2 > Fin.