âYou think I asked that because I didnât know??â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyukâs light retort caused Choi Jeong-Hoonâs expression to crumple.
You think Iâve been to Pyongyang before?!
How should I know where we are right now?!
Stop asking whatever pops up in your head, and think first! (Choi Jeong-Hoonâs inner monologue)
âShouldnât we get off?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âSeems that way, butâŠ.â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
Jeong In-Soo wasnât moving at the moment, so it seemed like a good idea to wait for a while first.
The colonel was scanning the outside of the bus with ultra-sharp eyes. Since there had been a trouble earlier, he wasnât sure how the North would act this time.
It was then, someone walked over to the bus.
Knock, knock.
Even at a single glance, this middle-aged man looked to be in a high-ranking position.
âDid something happen inside?â (?)
A quiet, cautious voice could be heard coming from him, and the special forces soldier guarding the busâs door shifted his gaze towards Jeong In-Soo.
âOpen it.â (Jeong In-Soo)
âSir.â
The door opened and the middle-aged man standing before it smiled while spreading his arms wide.
âThank you for coming such a long way. Welcome. Iâm Chief of Staff Park Yong-Hui, the Workersâ Party of the Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Joseon.â
âIâm Colonel Jeong In-Soo, from the Republic of Koreaâs Territory Defence Command.â
âIf itâs the Territory Defence Command, then thatâs an important organisation, indeed. And soâŠ.â (Park Yong-Hui)
The Chief of Staff scanned the interior of the bus behind Jeong In-Soo.
âWho is Comrade Rhee Ji-Hyuk?â (Park Yong-Hui)
Yi Ji-Hyuk stood up from his seat.
âItâs me.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âWell, itâs hard to tell from here, you see. Is it more comfortable to be sitting inside the bus? Why donât you all disembark? Iâm sure youâre hungry from the long trip, so why donât I treat you to a good meal?â (Park Yong-Hui)
âKeuhâŠ.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk seemed chuffed by the suggestion and stepped on the busâs passageway to get to the exit.
âBut, Mister Yi Ji-Hyuk.â (Jeong In-Soo)
Jeong In-Soo tried to dissuade him, but the latter simply smirked instead.
âThese people arenât brainless, probably. So itâs fine.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âMmâŠ.â (Jeong In-Soo)
That was true. Maybe, he was being way too cautious here. For one, North Korea wasnât such a thuggish regime that itâd threaten those entering the country as guests of the state.
Now normally, they did show some consideration towards the state guests in the past.
Jeong In-Soo, looking tense, issued a new order to the special forces soldiers. He was silently ordering them not to lower their guard.
Soldiers understood his intentions and nodded in reply.
âSo, this comrade here is Comrade Rhee Ji-Hyuk?â (Park Yong-Hui)
âYep, that I am.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk nodded his head, and the Chief of Staff, Park Yong-Hui, smiled brightly.
âNice to meet you. Iâve been hearing that lately, thanks to your hard work, our peopleâs international prestige has been rising up everyday, Comrade Rhee Ji-Hyuk.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âEhehe, thatâs not true.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk was weak against praises. Well, he hadnât been subjected to heartfelt praises not too often in his life before, so there was that.
Also, those that did praise him often fell into the categories of either demonic beings, fellow dark sorcerers, or worse, con men.
âWeâve prepared a feast for you, so let us head there right away.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âA meal, is it?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âWeâve readied the cuisine only found within our Democratic Peopleâs Republic. I must warn you, however. They are so good that if you taste them once, you may never wish to go back.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âOhhh!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
An expectant smile formed on Yi Ji-Hyukâs lips.
âHey, isnât this atmosphere better than expected?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Sure, there were countless soldiers surrounding this place, but they werenât carrying any firearms so they didnât come across as heavy-handed.
No, the sense of being wholeheartedly welcomed was far stronger.
âNow normally, our citizens should have welcomed you as well, but with our current situation being what it is, we couldnât ready them in time. Iâd like to ask for your understanding.â (Park Yong-Hui)
Jeong In-Soo smiled back.
âOh, no. No need for that. With our current situation, such a welcome would have proven to be more burdensome for us.â (Jeong In-Soo)
âThank you for your generous words.â (park Yong-Hui)
âThatâs that, then. But, what about the monster situation?â (Jeong In-Soo)
âLet us discuss that over the meal.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âAlright.â (Jeong In-Soo)
Jeong In-Soo nodded his head and followed after Park Yong-Hui walking ahead.
âComrade Rhee Ji-Hyuk.â (Park Yong-Hui)
Park Yong-Hui walking together out in front engaged in a chat first.
âYes?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âIâve been hearing that Comrade Rhee Ji-Hyuk, you are the number one warrior in South Joseon. Is that true?â (Park Yong-Hui)
âA warrior? Iâm a demon king, actually.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âAhahaha. Youâre pretty good with jokes, comrade.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âBut, itâs true?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
What a world it was, no one wanting to believe in the truth. Yi Ji-Hyuk suddenly felt somewhat saddened.
âWell, dunno anything about number one warrior or whatever, but itâs true that Iâm the strongest, sure.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âOhh, I see. I also heard that youâve been helping those Yankee b*stards too. Is that true as well?â (Park Yong-Hui)
âYup. They keep asking me for help, so.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âThatâs too bad.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âHow come?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âYou showing those stuck-up Yankees a thing or two is a wonderful thing, but had you chosen to leave them alone for a bit longer, they wouldâve gone through lots more hardship, you see⊠What a miss that is.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âIs that so?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Park Yong-Hui nodded his head.
âIsnât it true that the Americans have been interrupting our unification efforts until now? Without their interference, we might have been united as one people by now.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âBut, our President didnât seem that keen on unification at allâŠ.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âOh, is that so?â (Park Yong-Hui)
âThatâs how it looked to me.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Choi Jeong-Hoonâs jaw nearly hit the ground.
How could he so casually announce such a sensitive topic like that as if he was describing whose dog that stray mutt was??
Was he even aware of what he was saying right now?
âWell, from what I hear, itâs not that they donât, but the situation isnât allowing them to do anything about itâŠ. In any case, it sounded really complicated in every way imaginable.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âIndeed. A person wanting to get married is a complicated affair already, so two nations wanting to join together can never be a simple endeavour.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âNow that I hear you, I guess youâre right.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
But, it was a pretty simple affair back in Berafe.
One only had to invade another nation and cut the kingâs head off which would naturally lead to the âunificationâ. So heâd been thinking that it was an easy thing after all, but it seemed that matters were a wee bit different this side.
âNo, hang on. Itâs not that different, is it?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
This place was basically a kingdom anyway, so it didnât need a whole lot to crumble this country. Just cutting off the head of the snake would do.
Sure, the aftermaths were going to be messy and that was why no one tried to do anything so far, but still.
âCanât tell whether thatâs being selfish or realisticâŠ.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
No, maybe they were the same in this case.
âWeâve always thought that our ability users wouldnât lose out to anyone from any other nation out there, but after hearing your exploits so far, I have to wonder whether our boys are insufficiently trained or not.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âWell, thatâs something youâre born with, you know. Hard work isnât going to help there.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk was a man who had already abandoned his modesty back in Berafe.
âHowever, those idiots are really proud of themselves, you see.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âIs that so?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âIâd like to ask you for a favour when youâre meeting them later. They are a prideful bunch and donât want to listen to orders. In case they act all haughty and arrogant, please, be more understanding of their shortcomings as befitting a generous man such as yourself.â (Park Yong-Hui)
âBut, Iâm narrow-minded?â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âUhuhuhuh. As I said before, youâre good with jokes.â (Park Yong-Hui)
It was then, Choi Jeong-Hoonâs expression hardened.
âThat, he shouldnât take that as a jokeâŠ.â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
From Yi Ji-Hyukâs perspective, he mustâve been starting to feel frustrated by now. When one thought about it, he always spoke straightforwardly without holding himself back. Just how many incidents did occur after the other side misinterpreted or didnât believe what he was saying?
âGroanâŠ.â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
Choi Jeong-Hoon could already guess pretty much what would happen later.
***
1
âSir, they have arrived.â (Park Du-Jin)
âIn Pyongyang?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âYes, sir. The report just came in.â (Park Du-Jin)
Currently, the whole of the Blue House was in the highest state of alert.
ââŠ.Maybe, we shouldnât have sent him up there?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
President Yun Yeong-Min began biting into his nails again. He mustâve chewed through them a lot, because one could barely see any left on his fingers.
Park Du-Jin hurriedly dissuaded his boss and Yun Yeong-Min reluctantly lowered his hand.
âGroanâŠ. I had no idea Iâd be this anxious. I wasnât this jittery when that man was sent to the States, so thisâŠ.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âSir, back then you had no idea what kind of a person Mister Yi Ji-Hyuk was.â (Park Du-Jin)
ââŠ.Ah, so thatâs why.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
He heard that the man was a wackjob, but whoâd have known that the level of wackjob-ness would be that high? After personally experiencing it, he knew now that it was on another realm from what heâd been hearing so far.
And he had to send such a bundle of incidents waiting to happen to North KoreaâŠ.
âI, I need ulcer medicationâŠ.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âHere, sir.â (Park Du-Jin)
Park Du-Jin quickly pushed forward a glass of water and the stomach pills.
âOhh! As expected of you, Chief Secretary. Your preparedness is still top-notch.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
ââŠ.Choi Jeong-Hoon has left those pills behind, sir.â (Park Du-Jin)
âEh?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âHe said that you might need them.â (Park Du-Jin)
ââŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠâ
Indeed, no one knew better than Choi Jeong-Hoon when it came to the matters related to Yi Ji-Hyuk.
ââŠ.Incidents that happened so far happened not because Choi Jeong-Hoon wasnât around, sir.â (Park Du-Jin)
âWhy couldnât you just agree with me???â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âMy apologies, sir.â (Park Du-Jin)
Yun Yeong-Min spat out a helpless sigh.
âMister Minister. Youâve finished with all the preparation in case of their provocation, right?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
The Defence Minister nodded his head.
âYes sir, Mister President. From all forward military bases to our air force, everyone is in their highest state of alert, sir.â (Defence Minister)
âI still feel anxious regardless.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Yun Yeong-Min stared at the large display with an anxious face. It was currently showing Pyongyangâs skyline.
âI hope that there wonât be any accidents.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âMonsters should be arriving there soon, so Iâm sure they wonât carelessly try to provoke Mister Yi Ji-Hyuk now, sir.â (Defence Minister)
âI too donât think that will happen, but well, we all know what North Korea is like. I canât help but be anxious, knowing that they do unexpected things all the time as if itâs the most obvious thing.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âThatâs true.â (Defence Minister)
âI donât care about anything else at the moment, I just pray that he doesnât run into their so-called Peopleâs Chairman. Youâve definitely conveyed our intentions, yes?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âYes, sir. Unfortunately, we just canât be sure how they would take it.â (Defence Minister)
âYou mean, our intentions?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âSir. From our perspective, we are trying to spare them some potential pain, but they might take it as us trying to stop them from luring away Mister Yi Ji-HyukâŠ.â (Defence Minister)
âLuring him away?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Yun Yeong-Minâs expression hardened.
âIs there any chance of that happening?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âIâve already asked Mister Choi Jeong-Hoon regarding Mister Yi Ji-Hyukâs beliefs and political leanings, just in case, butâŠ.â (Park Du-Jin)
âWhat did he say?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âHe said that there is no snowballâs chance in hell that Mister Yi Ji-Hyuk would live in a country without Cola.â (Park Du-Jin)
âAhâŠ..â (Yun Yeong-Min)
He wasnât choosing which supermarket to shop, so using Cola to decide oneâs country was a bitâŠ.
However, that explanation sure had some persuasive power.
âMeaning, heâs a dyed-in-the-wool capitalist.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Yun Yeong-Min ended up smirking a bit just then.
Youâd feel worried and irritated if a man named Yi Ji-Hyuk was around you, but he could also be one of the most entertaining people to watch when thrown into someone elseâs backyard.
ââŠâŠHang on a minute. Cola?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Suddenly, Yun Yeong-Minâs eyes trembled.
âHas Mister Yi Ji-Hyuk ever been to countries without Cola in the past?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âNo, sir. Heâs been to China, Britain, the United States and Japan, so far.â (Park Du-Jin)
âA problem shouldnât rise up because of that, right?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âAhahahaâŠ.â (Park Du-Jin)
Park Du-Jinâs laughter eventually subsided.
âIâm sure that wonât be the case, sir.â (Park Du-Jin)
No matter how badly he lacked common sense, there was just no way heâd cause an incident over such a thing.
*
âW-whatâs this??â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyukâs eyes were visibly trembling.
âItâs carbonated and sweetened cocoa juice.â
âThisâŠ. this?!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
And now, his entire body was trembling.
There was a veritable feast of countless cuisines laid out before his eyes. Unfortunately, Yi Ji-Hyukâs palette had been ruined by the MSG-added cheap-a*s food so such high-class dishes came across as plain and even in some cases, a bit too oily.
And thatâs why he asked for a bottle of Cola, but thisâŠ.
The thing placed before his eyes only had a similar colouring to Cola and nothing else besides â it was simple cocoa âwaterâ with this weird taste and no carbonation to speak of.
âIt, itâs not carbonated??â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyukâs hands shook uncontrollably.
No one knew how long they had to stay here, yet to think there was no Cola in this place?!
Suddenly, the light in Yi Ji-Hyukâs eyes became resolute.
âIâm going back!!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âMister Yi Ji-Hyuk!!â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
Choi Jeong-Hoon freaked out and hurriedly grabbed onto Yi Ji-Hyuk.
âLet me go!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
What did he feel happiest about when coming back from Berafe? It was the fact that now heâd be able to eat and drink like a real human being.
Whether it was Berafe or the demon worldâŠ. as far as food was concerned, both places only had garbage!
But now, he couldnât have Cola?!
It was basically the same thing as stealing away one of the greatest pleasures he could enjoy in this world.
âYou, wait a bit here. Everyone going back is a bit too much, sure, so Iâll just quickly pop back home and come back. Iâll buy some Cola, andâŠ.â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âNo, you canât!â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
âAnd why not?!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
âThatâll be a huge problem!!â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
Choi Jeong-Hoon jumped up in surprise and grabbed Yi Ji-Hyuk even tighter.
Did he not know what might happen if he showed the Northâs officials his ability to open a Gate and go back to the South? It was the same thing as telling them that he could invade Pyongyang at any time he felt like it. It didnât take a genius to figure out how the North would react to such a revelation.
âSeriously, whatâs so special about some Cola?!â (Choi Jeong-Hoon)
âItâs not, so let me go and get some!!â (Yi Ji-Hyuk)
Yi Ji-Hyuk started throwing a huge tantrum, causing the Chief of Staff Park Yong-Hui to dazedly ask Jeong In-Soo.
âThat comrade, whatâs gotten into him?â (Park Yong-Hui)
The good colonel was utterly lost for words and could only stare at the ceiling above.
âAh, so this is what national disgrace is like.â (Jeong In-Soo)
Jeong In-Soo became infinitely sad just then.
< 309. Ah, so this is what national disgrace is like -4 > Fin.