âThereâs nothing left to eat?â (Chang-Sik)
âNo, itâs not ânothingâ, but just that the delivery hasnât come in yet.â (foreman)
âIsnât that the same thing?â (Chang-Sik)
Choi Chang-Sik could only groan while looking at the foreman struggling to answer.
âCanât you, like, be honest with us?â (Chang-Sik)
âA-about⌠what?â (foreman)
âWhether it really is the supply issue or weâre running out of food.â (Chang-Sik)
âT-that, that isâŚâ (foreman)
The foreman instantly became hesitant. The surrounding workers were currently staring at him with sharp glares.
âUncles, you should all ease up a bit, too. This isnât the foremanâs fault, right? If we want to know the truth, we shouldnât all behave like this.â (Chang-Sik)
The people exchanged glances with each other after listening to Chang-Sikâs urging, then slightly lowered their heads.
âHonestly, I also donât know.â (foreman)
âYou donât knowâŚâ (Chang-Sik)
âAll I heard was that the delivery wonât come today, and itâll only resume sometime tomorrow.â (foreman)
âMister foreman, you also have no idea whatâs going on?â (Chang-Sik)
Chang-Sik roughly scratched his head. In that case, he couldnât just blame the foreman here, even if it was unknown whether the latter was telling the truth or not.
âBut then again, what would he know, anyway?â (Chang-Sik)
The foreman was merely in charge of managing the workers in this place and not someone possessing up-to-date information on what was going on around the world.
Itâs just that Chang-Sik figured the foreman would know a little more than everyone else here since the latter was frequently in contact with the higher-ups. However, when he thought about it some more, the ones in the upper management wouldnât necessarily explain everything to a foreman of a small factory like theirs, even if he was in charge of distributing rations.
âThere shouldnât be a reason for the supply to be disrupted here.â (Chang-Sik)
When objectively thinking about it, there was no reason for the food delivery to run into issues since it wasnât as if bombs had been dropped behind the battlelines or something.
âWhat do you think is the problem, mister foreman?â (Chang-Sik)
âI told you, I donât know.â (foreman)
âNo, Iâm not asking you for the truth, just your opinion.â (Chang-Sik)
âMy opinion, is itâŚâ (foreman)
The foreman scanned the workers with a pair of deeply anxious eyes.
âWe wonât start a riot or something like that.â (Chang-Sik)
What Chang-Sik said prompted the foreman to flinch.
âLogically speaking, you start a riot if thereâs something to forcibly take away in the first place, right? We all know already that there arenât any foodstuffs left in the supermarkets and the convenience stores, so whatâs the point of rioting now? Itâs not like we want extra soaps or shampoos, you know?â (Chang-Sik)
âI guess so.â (foreman)
The foreman sighed under his breath.
âDunno if you noticed it lately, but the rations had been decreasing in size from a little while ago.â (foreman)
âOr we only get mixed grains, instead.â (Chang-Sik)
âRight, that too.â (foreman)
The foreman continued on with a slightly trembling voice.
âThis is what I think⌠The food production hasnât completely stopped, but⌠Iâm beginning to think that the food reserve is running out.â (foreman)
âThe reserve?â (Chang-Sik)
âYou know, things like rice and stuff.â (foreman)
Chang-Sik became somewhat stupefied as he stared at the foreman.
âWe ran out of rice?â (Chang-Sik)
What kind of an absurd tale was this??
âNo, hang on. Before this crisis happened, Iâve been hearing stories about rice rotting away in storage somewhere because we have too much so we gotta financially support the farmers, and also itâs costing billions every year just to store away the surplus and things like that, yet we ran out of rice already?!â (Chang-Sik)
âBut that was when we still had functioning international trade.â (foreman)
The foreman spat out a lengthy groan.
âBack then, rice wasnât really important. Half the people usually consumed bread or noodles or something else. But now, thereâs nothing else to eat beside rice these days, isnât it?â (foreman)
Chang-Sik became speechless.
âThere are some rumblings about MREs but thatâs the story for the folks in the frontlines⌠They canât really spare some to the people behind the lines.â (foreman)
âBut, even if thatâs true, we only lost Seoul so far, so how come we donât have enough food?â (Chang-Sik)
âI told you, itâs just my guess. Besides, that reasoning is wrong. Itâs not that we donât have food because we lost Seoul, itâs more like the food stopped coming because the international trade has stopped. Think about it. Trade with the countries that used to export food to our country have all stopped now, right?â (foreman)
âIâm sure that the food reserve hasnât completely run out yet. I mean, we did have plenty of farmers in the countryside, after all. So the food couldnât have run out in only a little over two months.â (foreman)
âWell, yeah.â (Chang-Sik)
âThe real issue, though, is whether or not the folks with spare food reserves are willing to sell them.â (foreman)
âWhy wouldnât they?â (Chang-Sik)
âThey also need to eat, donât they? In our current situation, thereâs no guarantee of buying food even if you have the money, so who would be willing to sell what they have?â (Chang-Sik)
Chang-Sik forgot what he wanted to say. He never thought about the issue that way before.
âNo, hang on. Iâve not heard about countries going to war running out of food, you know?â (Chang-Sik)
âThatâs because, no matter which war in history youâre talking about, the whole planet wasnât embroiled in it, thatâs why. The fighting often took place only on the frontlines and the areas behind didnât face many problems, after all. However, you know thatâs not how things are now.â (foreman)
âNot only the whole world is fighting to stay alive, nobody knows when the locations you think are safe will start developing problems. And besides, when the world wars broke out, they didnât rely heavily on food import like us. And finally, the government wouldnât have planned for an all-out warfare that lasted for this long, too.â (foreman)
âIn that case, what should we do?â (Chang-Sik)
Chang-Sik asked with an idiotic-looking face, and the foreman could only sigh.
âHow should I know? Except that⌠if the government folks have any functioning brains, they should be coming up with a solution soon enough. Either they forcibly appropriate food or find another way.â (foreman)
ââŚWow, this sucks.â (Chang-Sik)
Chang-Sik grunted helplessly.
He had been feeling it on his skin that the country was circling down the drain lately. But forget about his skin, he could acutely feel it right down to his bones now.
âHow are we supposed to hold on without food?â (Chang-Sik)
Worries crept all over Chang-Sik but he did his best to not show it on his face. He knew that people were focusing on him, thatâs why.
Humans had this tendency to search for someone to rely on in times of crisis. And the regular hierarchy of society would break down the worse the crisis was.
Chang-Sik wouldâve been treated like some wet-behind-the-ears punk who hadnât even gone to the army yet if they were in a normally functioning society. But as things stood now, he somehow ended up as the unspoken leader of the people working in this place.
âIs it confirmed that the food supply will get going again from tomorrow?â (Chang-Sik)
ââŚI canât say itâs been confirmed, but thatâs what they told me.â (foreman)
âIn that case, weâll have to wait, then.â (Chang-Sik)
âBut, look here, Chang-Sik.â
Chang-Sik waved his hand dismissively at the voice calling out to him from somewhere in the back.
âI know what you want to say, but weâll look like a bunch of clowns if we go on a rampage today only for the food to show up tomorrow, you know?â (Chang-Sik)
âBut, this problem concerns our livelihood.â
âWith how the situation is, we gotta accept the cards being dealt to us for now. Even I wouldâve gone straight to the principalâs office if the school wasnât giving me food, and tear out what little hair remained on the principalâs baldy head, but our current situation isnât like that, right?â (Chang-Sik)
âW-well, yeah. Thatâs true.â
âOther people are still working their butts off, so letâs not ruin the mood for everyone else. We wait until tomorrow, and if no food comes through even then, it wonât be too late to flip the table and start something.â (Chang-Sik)
Everyone seemed to be in agreement.
âOkay, but what about today?â
âWell, we all have stashed some food away, havenât we? Why donât we just eat that for today?â (Chang-Sik)
Quite a few people were shooting him dissatisfied glares, but none seemed willing to express their unhappiness in the open.
This situation wouldnât get resolved just because they got angry and threw a tantrum, and besides, they were also scared by the possibility of the gun-toting MPs patrolling the streets outside barging in here after they caused a commotion.
âHowever, a major problem will happen if no food is distributed tomorrowâŚâ (Chang-Sik)
Everyone here was holding back because there was the hope of incoming food tomorrow. But if the supply kept getting disrupted like this in the future, then itâd be only a matter of time before the ticking bomb exploded.
To all these people who worked hard and continued to endure the hardship while holding onto the faint ray of hope that they might survive somehow, the notion of âno foodâ would be the same thing as telling them to die of hunger after enduring for so long.
âIn any case, letâs go and eat something.â (Chang-Sik)
âBut they didnât give us any food, so what can we even eat now? All the supermarkets are empty by now, too.â
âIâve stashed a few packets of ramen away, so letâs just eat that for today. Mister foreman, do you have a burner with a good output? Cuz it looks like a lot of ramen needs to be cooked today.â (Chang-Sik)
âI think thereâs a stove for cooking stews in the kitchen.â (foreman)
âThen please tell them to prepare the equipment. Iâll go with a few people to fetch the ramen.â (Chang-Sik)
âOh, will you do that?â (foreman)
Chang-Sik smirked and turned around to leave. Even before he said something, several people accompanied him.
However, despite turning around all cool and the like, Chang-Sikâs complexion couldnât be described as bright at all.
âWe are really at the limit.â (Chang-Sik)
He had been hearing the stories of riots breaking out from here and there. Such as, some people demonstrating in some other place got forcibly suppressed yesterday, and earlier today, people who were forced into working in a factory a bit of a distance away had started a riot, etcâŚ
Although it might not seem acceptable, he still understood where they were coming from.
Not acceptable, since the whole world was in a crisis and everyone needed to work together yet they were going on a riot, but at the same time, the rioters mustâve been deeply frustrated and tired for them to riot in the first place.
Even Chang-Sik himself got royally p*ssed off more than a couple of times already at this gradually worsening situation and the frustrating reality.
âHey, Chang-Sik.â (Choi)
Mister Choi next to him quietly asked him a question.
âDidnât we have a blackout yesterday in the factory?â (Choi)
âHow many times have it been this week?â (Choi)
âI think, three times? But regular households only get electricity during a short time in the evenings these days. Itâs not like we are living in North Korea or something, but oh well.â (Chang-Sik)
ââŚIâm trying so hard to stay tough, but man, Iâm getting more and more worried, dude.â (Choi)
âMe too, uncle. Me too.â (Chang-Sik)
âReally? So it wasnât just me whoâs getting worried?â (Choi)
âNah. Everyoneâs scared. But weâre still holding on.â (Chang-Sik)
ââŚI see. Knowing that kinda comforts me a little.â (Choi)
Chang-Sik watched Mister Choiâs shoulders slump lower and clenched his teeth.
âWeâre really at our limit, hyungâŚâ (Chang-Sik)
People were still dying in droves by the frontlines even as he chatted away. He didnât want to be that guy who whined while doing a relatively easier job behind the line, but even he was reaching the limit of suppressing his mental exhaustion.
Even if the situation stopped getting worse and stabilised as it was now, the people enduring behind the battle lines would sooner or later reach their mental limit.
âIâm sure itâs worse at the frontlines.â (Chang-Sik)
A battle that continues on for two months? Now that was something no one would be able to even imagine. Didnât it mean that youâd have to live under the fear of not knowing when youâd die for two months straight?
The physical pain would be one thing, but the mental trauma would truly be enormous.
âDidnât you say the last time that this situation will come to an end if some guy comes back?â (Choi)
ââŚYeah, I did.â (Chang-Sik)
âCan I still believe in that?â (Choi)
Chang-Sik nodded his head.
âYeah, heâs someone like that. And heâs someone whoâll make it happen, too. Iâm sure the reason why heâs taking longer is to get better prepared.â (Chang-Sik)
âFor real, right?â (Choi)
âEii, itâs not just me making an empty claim, you know. Do you remember that time when some people from the higher-ups came to fetch me?â (Chang-Sik)
âYeah, that did happen.â (Choi)
âThatâs why we gotta hold on for a little bit longer. When we do, my hyung will surely show up.â (Chang-Sik)
âI will have nothing more to wish for if that happens for realâŚâ (Choi)
Mister Choi blurred the ends of his sentence.
He wasnât in no shape to encourage himself only with Chang-Sikâs assurance at this stage. Should he say that those words were nothing more than the faintest thread of hope that barely held everything together?
âWhat point is there to return after everythingâs over?â (Chang-Sik)
Chang-Sik felt his innards starting to boil when he remembered Yi Ji-Hyukâs tendency to appear at the most âopportuneâ timing in the past.
He could only pray and then, pray some more, that Yi Ji-Hyuk and Co., would arrive before everything came to an end.
< 464. With something powerful and unmissable -4 > Fin.