KJ
Selections
DEAR
LEADER
Fiction by Russell Working, from KJ
#52
1
Let us call her Eun-ju, for people may die if her real
name is revealed. Her own life is in danger, and her two sisters, her
brother-in-law, and one surviving nephew remain at large south of the
Tumen River, near the port of Hongwan, a city of apartment blocks without
toilets, empty wharves populated by slump-shouldered cranes and rusty
destroyers, a train station where the homeless sleep in the waiting
room seats or on the floor with the mice, and bony children who lie
down in the streets because after a certain point — thirty, thirty-five
days, perhaps — one cannot stand any longer. The point is, it
is illegal to flee the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, and the
crime is compounded for party members (and Eun-ju is a member of this
caste: a journalist). The organs would arrest her relatives if they
figured out the identity of this twenty-four-year-old refugee, and there
is not enough food to squander on prisoners in North Korea. The only
ones definitely beyond the reach of the secret police are her mother
and two infant nieces, all of whom died of pneumonia; Papa, the person
responsible for what happened, by now surely has also died: when Eun-ju
fled to China, he was groaning from an advanced case of intestinal cancer,
a fitting way to die in a famine, he said, and perhaps he has been buried,
in her absence, in the cemetery overlooking the flood plains. Yet if
anyone was culpable, it was he, for he urged her to flee, saying, "Go,
you are young, you are beautiful" (though this could not possibly
be true; she was balding at the time she left: strands of her hair clung
to her fingers whenever she smoothed it), "at least one of the
family should live. Some young Korean farmer in China will pay good
money for you."
Let us call him Young-shik. He is thirty-five years old, a sixth-grade
graduate, a tiller of four-tenths of a hectare of soybeans and vegetables
in China's Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture. Young-shik has never
married, but his position is commonplace in rural Yanbian; the region
is in crisis, its villages populated by Korean bachelor farmers. Innumerable
girls were abandoned at birth and died in orphanages. The living disappeared
in adulthood into the cities to work as prostitutes or serve Laochaoyang
vodka in the karaoke bars or even, in the case of a single
outstanding student he had once known, to study at Yanbian University.
None of them, not even the simplest, a retarded girl twelve years his
junior, was willing to spend her remaining five decades with Young-shik,
leading an ox back and forth plowing a field. The retarded girl was
now a masseuse. Her mother refused his proposal last time she was in
town. "She already earns four times what you do; why would she
marry you?" the mother said. Truth be told, he was a little relieved.
He was no academician, but he did not know if he could enjoy life with
a simpleton. He needed someone to cook, someone to lie with, someone
to tell of his happiness when the bean shoots come up overnight after
a rain; speaking softly, for they would not want to wake their infant
son — in his mind there was no doubt that she would bear him a
son. That she, too, might wish to talk as well on occasion did not occur
to him. He had so much to say, and often he went for two or three days
without speaking to anyone but the peasant squatting two holes over
in the brick latrine that was only toilet for several dozen houses on
this street.
"Give us the paper, would you?" Young-shik would say.
The man would grunt and hand over a copy of the Yanbian Daily.
"Don't use the soccer results."
"Of course not." Young-shik tore off the page with the ads
for China Mobile and a miracle hair restoration ointment and returned
the rest. "Thank you," he said.
"You're welcome."
This passed for conversation on most days during the five years it took
for Young-shik to save up enough money for a wife.
They met one afternoon in February twenty-three days
after she left North Korea. An ethnic Korean marriage broker named Bong-il
drove her to her new home near Yanji, rasping dire warnings all the
way in the back seat of his smoky Land Cruiser while his driver adjusted
the music on the stereo. "If you run away, we will find you, understand?
He is paying good money for you, and we are men of our word. We will
return you, and you'll discover what an angry husband can do to a girl.
I know this one guy, he chained his wife to the bed and gouged her eyes
out the third time she tried to run away. If we don't find you, the
police will, and you know what that means: back to North Korea. Stay
put. Even if he beats you, you'll be fed, unlike in Hongwan, right?
You will live. Seems like a fair bargain." He threw his cigarette
butt out the window and asked, "Are you listening?" She was.
"Good," he said, "because I'm not trying to scare you,
I hope you're happy, I truly do, you are such a pretty girl, or you
will be when you fatten up and your hair grows back, I can see such
things when anyone else in my place would think you're a throwaway,
that's why I'm so good at this business: I get off on the potential
of beauty, the withered rose bush that can be coaxed back to flower.
I'm just explaining the situation, that's all. Anyway, you should thank
me: I got you someone who was a cut above all these peasants. A wily
man, makes a little money selling his produce in the markets. Incidentally,
it's his prerogative to resell you if he wishes. Maybe that isn't so
bad. Think of it this way: if you don't get along, maybe you'll end
up with someone more compatible."
As they rounded a bend just out of Yanji, an enormous house came into
view, standing on a bluff over the road and surrounded by a brick wall
frosted along the top with the distant gleam of glass shards, and for
a moment her heart leapt with the thought that she might be heading
for a life of luxury in such an estate. But then Bong-il noticed her
gaze and said, "Do you like that place? It's mine." She scoffs.
"I'm not kidding. There's a lot of money in girls. And of course
I have other business ventures. You had no idea you were in the presence
of such an important man, huh, little girl?" There was a long silence
as the Land Cruiser continued on to Young-shik's village, then barreled
past row upon row of attached brick houses — slum dwellings, really:
single story, each no larger than a villager's hut, and topped by swayback
tile roofs and a clutter of crooked brick chimneys leaking coal smoke
into a contuse, yellow sky. The rows of homes were separated by dirt
roads where children played hopscotch, cautiously, finding the rough
spots, because yesterday a cold rain had washed away the snow and now
everything was frozen mud. Several children stopped to watch the strange
vehicle. It passed three white doors and a red one, each decorated with
strips of red paper whose gold characters wished health and prosperity
to all who entered, then finally they stopped, Bong-il leaning across
Eun-ju to let her out. Or to hold her in, rather, because he pinned
her in place and slipped a business card into her hand.
"If he decides to sell you, have him call me," Bong-il said.
"Maybe I can broker someone better, once you fill out a little."
She got out and slammed the car door.
When Bong-il knocked, a farmer with a wind-creased face opened the door:
a handsome jaw, intelligent eyes, a tiny wart by his nose, a superabundance
of moles. Young-shik's overlarge paws were black with dirt, but he nonetheless
shook Bong-il's soft, dank hand (Bong-il wiped his hand afterwards with
a silk handkerchief; Young-shik dried his palm on his pants) and invited
them through a concrete-floored entry room filled with rakes, shovels,
buckets, dried ears of corn hanging from the walls, a plow without a
blade. Glancing frequently with mute wonder at Eun-ju, the farmer led
them into the living quarters, a single room with an electric cooker
built into the floor-a gas unit covered by a lid the size of a truck's
hubcap. A faucet poked its snout from the kitchen wall, but there was
no sink, and a plastic trash barrel had been placed underneath it to
catch the water. Everywhere there were signs that this was not North
Korea: a twenty-kilo bag of rice sat in the corner, color calendars
with pictures of girls in swimsuits hung on the walls, and there was
electricity to squander: a miniature black-and-white television buzzed
with a broadcast of a soccer game. Astoundingly, a bird cheeped from
within Young-shik's shirt pocket. He patted himself down and removed
a black object the size of a wallet, which he opened and spoke into.
"She just got here," he said. "I'll call back."
A phone without a cord. He folded and pocketed it. Blushing, he explained,
"My mother." Then he remembered his manners and asked everyone
to sit on the floor.
Young-shik surveyed the woman, a scrawny refugee with cherry red lipstick
supplied by Bong-il, dressed in a fake Adidas warm-up suit, recently
purchased, over which she wore her only remaining article of clothing
from Korea: a padded long overcoat with a chevron pattern woven into
the fabric.
"Why is her hair so short?" he asked.
The broker waved away his concern. "Hunger. You should have seen
her when she got here: almost completely bald. They're often like that
when they leave. Anyway, you can see it's already growing back, glossy
and thick. We've been fattening her up for you."
Young-shik stared at Eun-ju and opened his mouth as if wishing to say
something, but he was struck dumb. He turned to Bong-il for help.
"Her personality — how is it?"
"Quiet. Very kind. Obedient."
"And she is capable of bearing children?"
"Absolutely. She was inspected by a doctor, a woman doctor."
This was entirely untrue, but it mollified Young-shik, for he said,
"I think we agreed upon three thousand yuan?"
"This one is thirty-three hundred."
"You can't do that; you already said —"
"There were extra payments to the border guards on both sides,
more than I expected. This is a dangerous business, and I risked my
life to bring you your heart's desire. Besides, look at her, she's worth
it: a lovely girl, the future mother of your sons. There's this rich
guy in Yanji wanted her for karaoke, said he would pay double whatever
you offered, but I said a girl like this should go to a decent man.
What's three hundred? If you don't like her, you can always make a profit
on the resale."
Young-shik glowered at the broker, then at Eun-ju, as if she were somehow
complicit in this. She gave a sad, helpless shrug, and his expression
softened into a look of shy inquiry, as if to ask, Well, then, do you
think we can stand each other? Her eyebrows arched in reply: We shall
see. This made him smile, and he nodded, almost bowed, a motion of the
shoulders rather than his head, and began counting out the money from
a candy box that he kept in the wardrobe. Bong-il's hitherto dour face
split in a broad grin. Thirty-three hundred yuan was everything this
farmer possessed, it was obvious, and it flattered the broker's vanity,
as it might flatter a heroin dealer's, to offer a commodity so achingly
desired by the buyer.
Young-shik handed over the money without meeting Bong-il's gaze, full
of glad bonhomie, then endured the broker's congratulations, his slaps
on the back, his assurances that he would not regret this; for that
matter, Bong-il nearly blurted out not to worry, she was terrific in
bed, never mind that the age, twenty-whatever, was a little old for
his tastes; he preferred to sample the fourteen-, fifteen-year-olds
that the pimps and millionaires purchased — or at least his face
said all that as he gave one last happy wink at Eun-ju. Then seeing
he was unwanted, he bounced out, whistling as he strode for the car,
where the driver slumped, head flung back and mouth open, as if murdered
at the wheel, but he quickened when his boss rapped on the glass. Young-shik
shut the door and returned to this new presence in his household: a
wife.
For a moment the two sat together. He reached for her hand, calculated
what point he might properly propose they go to bed, then blushed as
she read his thoughts. Instead he said, "I understand you were
a reporter."
"Yes, but it means nothing. I wrote what they told me."
"You have an education?"
"I graduated from Kim Il-Sung University, in Pyongyang."
"I used to long to go the university. I excelled in maths. But
I dropped out of school to help my father on the farm, so I'm an uneducated
man. I hope you won't find me too dull." A self-mocking grin tugged
at his mouth as he said this, and she could not help smiling.
"I am sure farming is an interesting occupation, as well."
"You're the first woman I have ever met who thought so." They
contemplated this. Momentarily it occurred to him to suggest, "Would
you like some tea?"
"Please."
"There's a box on the shelf there. I'd like a cup, too. And as
you see, the kettle stands beside it."
2
Young-shik was an innocent, just as Eun-ju had been
when she left Hongwan, and their first attempts at consummation were
abruptly concluded by his premature enthusiasm, a phenomenon that she
in all honesty hoped would continue, but by the third night they had
succeeded, or so he thought, for afterwards his heart was enraptured
and melancholy at once, and he kissed her face and shoulders again and
again, then spoke of the son he wanted, of the joy of family, of the
way his mother and his father used to stealthily rustle about at night
under the covers when they thought he was asleep, and for a long time,
until he was seven or eight years old, he thought they were looking
for something they had lost. But after he nodded off, Eun-ju lay awake
trembling, averting her interior gaze from the sunspot on her heart,
grasping instead at random distractions as they fluttered like moths
through her mind: Papa, his strong hands, the sadness that settled upon
him when I came home from school and recited my lessons: Our National
Father, who shines upon us like the sun, and after mumbling, "He
would be proud of you, daughter," he sat with a newspaper in his
lap, not reading, but staring at the wall, unable to be drawn from his
catatonic melancholy; no, something happier: think of Mama, long ago,
when there was food, returning from a trip to Vladivostok with a bag
of chocolates wrapped in shiny pictures of camels and palm trees, which
she placed on a shelf out of reach as I stamped and said I want I want
I want, an insufferable brat; think of home, of the candlelight glittering
on the frost patch the size of a mattress growing on the wall of the
living room; think of work, of the spaghetti of electrical wiring stapled
along the ceiling of the newsroom, of the baby cockroaches that infested
the desk drawers, of the broken Soviet refrigerator in the stinking
canteen without food, of the hours of sitting through speeches and parades
in order to write something that meant nothing to no one at any time
ever: Hongwan Kangdong Senior Middle School was renamed Hero Kangdong
Senior Middle School Tuesday, for among its graduates were a dozen labor
heroes of the republic who devoted their lives to shining acts of sacrifice
on behalf of the world-dazzling Juche ideal that has left the American
aggressors and their "south" Korean hirelings confounded and
amazed, heroes such as Ri Chun Do, who with his very body protected
the portraits of the President Kim Il Sung and Marshal Kim Jong Il and
saved many revolutionary comrades from the explosion of a hand grenade
and now enjoys eternal life (but even as you wrote-mindlessly,
the hangul letters goose-stepping from the fog of the unconscious-you
wanted to ask, What grenade? And why throw an explosive at a portrait?
And for that matter, how does one attain eternal life in a Marxist universe?).
As she lay there, however, the dark interior tide would not be stayed
by distractions, and she gave herself over to the flood of hot panic,
remembering
the night Bong-il unlocked the shed and called her, rather than the
two teenage girls she had heard whimpering every night from the main
house, remembering the vodka smell of his sweat and his fatness atop
her and the pain of his rubbery thrusting as she turned her head to
the side and bit her knuckles. Lying here now, with Young-shik, she
cried, but silently, because she did not wish to awaken her husband.
Dear Jesus, let me find peace here. Dear Buddha, do not let them arrest
me. Dear Leader, it is treason, but I do not want to die in your brilliant
present reality.
Shifting in the dark, Eun-ju held Young-shik because she had no one
else.
It was obvious that this farmer was crazy about her. When
the pussy willows budded in March, he brought home a bouquet and put
them in a bottle for her. He took down his girlie calendars after she
made a face at them. He inquired about her likes and dislikes with the
frown of a schoolboy seeking through diligence to make up for a long
absence from class. This is not to say he did not have expectations
of her —cooking, cleaning, scrubbing his farm clothes in a plastic
washbasin-and he did his best to issue his orders sternly, as was expected
of a husband. Yet however severe he attempted to sound, he always smiled,
and his face quickly assumed the smitten puppy dog expression he wore
in her presence. Nevertheless, she soon learned that in China, too,
there were ideological demands: he was stunned to discover that she
did not follow any soccer team, and informed her that she must now root
for Aodong; it would cause disharmony in the household if they were
not in accord on this matter. Aodong it will be, Eun-ju said. He nodded,
but the look of suspicion in his eye was entirely familiar: he was uncertain
of her orthodoxy. Yet Young-shik respected her enough to ask what her
favorite book was so he could read it; he was envious of her education.
At first she thought it was a trap-she did not yet trust him —
and she said that she had always found Chairman Mao's sayings deeply
influential. But seeing the look on his face, she confessed that she
did not especially like books; one always believed that the written
word could be full of joy and love and death and betrayal, but all you
read at home were classics such as Kim Jong-il In His Younger Days
and U.S. Troops' Bestial Tyranny Flayed, and despite the longing
one felt while gazing with one's eyes unfocused at the pages of any
given tome, imagining that words could arrange themselves into a living
force, one could not bring life to the stories about female guerillas
tearing off pieces of their tunics to create a quilt for the infant
Kim as Japanese bullets whistled past, not to mention to the entire
libraries full of industrial production statistics and Juche theory.
She cut herself short, abruptly stayed by a different worry: that she
had spoken over his head; at all costs she did not want to insult his
intellectual pride, lest he announce that he had had enough of this
headstrong woman and get rid of her.
But he nodded gravely and said, "I get the same feeling reading
the agricultural news in the papers here. There's so much they could
say — exposes of party leaders who manipulate the rice cooperative,
stories about how the hog farm is polluting the river — but it's
all harvest reports and five-year plans, even in the middle of a drought."
As the weeks passed, Eun-ju's fears that Young-shik would resell her
diminished. But although she had, on her first day in China, removed
from her lapel the medal of the deceased yet ever-living head of state
and Great Leader, President Kim Il-sung, grinning (the frowning medal
had been replaced some time ago), and pinned it inside her coat pocket
where she would not lose it; she dared not throw it away, for if the
unthinkable happened and she were picked up by the Chinese police and
sent home, she did not want to arrive at the frontier without her medal,
as its presence might mitigate her treason: I never lost my faith, I
never ceased to long for the fulfillment of human evolution achieved
in the Great Leader and his son, the Dear Leader: Kim Jong-il. She never
went outdoors unless absolutely necessary, and shopping in the open
market was her greatest anxiety: elbowing through the crowds in broad
daylight, ordering eels and bok choy, scooping paprika from the baskets
at a spice seller's stall, always glancing around to make sure the people
pressing close were grannies with shopping bags and not young men in
leather and sunglasses ready to grab her, for her fear was not only
of police but of other brokers, who had been known to kidnap Korean
girls already here in China and deliver them to other buyers. For the
first few weeks, she drank almost no tea and consumed as little water
as possible so that she would limit her trips to the community latrine,
though eventually she came to see that the neighbor women, all ethnic
Koreans, regarded her sympathetically, and two of them dropped by one
day to offer tips on how to dress and wear her makeup like a Chinese.
Often at night, however, after descending through a tunnel of relentless
dark, she found herself once again lying beside Bong-il as he snored,
and she thought, There's a knife in the kitchen and no one to stop me,
I could find it and plunge it into his neck. With her heart pounding,
she crept to the kitchen and felt about in the shadows, always unable
to find the knife, and then as her eyes adjusted she made out a dark
spot in the wall. A set of yellowed human teeth was nibbling a hole
from the other side, the cuspids recessed like Bong-il's. She woke herself,
and rolling over in moonlight, she looked at her husband, his mouth
gaping innocently, a yawning infant. Hush, she thought, hush, as though
it were he who had awakened terrified. She dared not turn on the light,
for fear of either waking Young-shik or catching the attention of a
police patrol that would then drop by to investigate. She did not know
if they would do this here in China, but old precautions were hard to
get rid of. She found a bottle of beer and drank it in the dark.
When May Day came, there was no avoiding one task out of doors. Young-shik
insisted that she help with the plowing. At first it frightened her,
working out in the bright fields in plain view of the cars, trucks,
cyclists, and red taxicabs that crept along the muddy road toward Yanji.
Eun-ju lead an ox team back and forth as Young-shik followed, steering
the plow and exhorting the beasts, "Come on! Get! Yah!" Sinking
ankle deep in the soil, she trudged along, stone-footed, the clay clinging
to her boots, but despite her anxiety, she began to enjoy herself, so
long had it been since she worked outside and felt the sun warming her
skin. The last time she had trudged across a rural field was when General
Secretary Kim himself had overseen the land realignment project in North
Phyongan Province, and she had covered his speech. Dear Leader: she
was surprised to discover that this hero military commander, inventor
of nuclear physics, astrophysicist, greatest golfer known to man, and
immortal botanist and biologist who had, at four years of age, discovered
why chickens raise their beaks when they drink and why there are no
black flowers — that this poet and genius was a fat little man
in a Mao suit with bouffant hair and yellow teeth, lecturing everyone
on Marxist doctrine as relates to land reclamation, cracking jokes with
his generals and regional party appartchiks about the girls they had
found him from the cooperative farms in Jongju city and Uiju and Kwaksan
counties, and a blasphemous thought wormed into her mind: that he was
merely stupid, this Son of the Most High who strode around waving his
pointer, who with his Father in Heaven had sown the seeds of everlasting
joy and prosperity across the land. Yet she suppressed this thought
and sang his praises in the story she filed, she could do it drunk or
asleep, so familiar was the speech she was given to paraphrase:
Feasting his eyes on the large standardized fields, he noted with great
satisfaction that provincial party members and other working people,
People's Army soldiers, shock brigade members from other provinces,
and engineers involved in the Land Realignment Campaign have completely
changed the appearance of the countryside by creditably finishing the
difficult and gigantic project on a high qualitative level. He lavished
praise on their great achievements and thanked them. He noted that all
the soldiers and people involved in the large-scale nature-transforming
project have carried out their enormous assignments in a matter of several
months in the indomitable revolutionary spirit of soldiers who were
pressed for everything, though the people's enemies had said that even
a few years would not be enough to complete the task. He added that
this is a world-startling miracle that has forced the craven American
aggressor to go down on his knees in awe of the achievements of the
Korean people.
He pointed out that the present brilliant reality in North Phyongan
Province clearly shows how powerful is the might of our army and people
who are rushing ahead in a high-pitched spirit with an iron faith that
once they are determined, they can do anything. He said that realignment
must be done throughout the whole land so that none of its former contours
could be recognized, and likewise the kulaks and hirelings of the imperialists
must be crushed in their attempts to secretly and illegally hoard food
crops for personal benefit.
"Ha!" Young-shik called behind the oxen. "Ha! Get up!"
As she led the snorting, muddy beasts back and forth, Eun-ju gazed across
the crests and valleys of Yanbian, and from here she could see half
a dozen other ox teams, the men always slogging along behind the plow,
the women (for those farmers lucky enough to be married) always leading
the oxen.
It is right that I will end my days as a farmwife. Working the soil
will be a penitence for every word I have written.
"You're drifting left," Young-shik called, and she yanked
on the reins and pulled the oxen in line.
3
The wedding was put off till the planting was done
in May, and by that time she had missed a period and was suffering from
alternating bouts of terrific hunger and nausea that caused her to bolt
for the garden and throw up. She told Young-shik she was not yet used
to rich food, for she did not want to raise his expectations just yet,
and she was afraid the family would insist that she have an abortion
if this child's sex proved to be incorrect, for she wanted to protect
for this being inside her, the prawnlike form, the tiny appendages that
would become legs and arms. So she kept the news secret for now. Yet
even without suspecting her condition, the family saw her as a treasure,
an enhancement of their status — my son, you know, has found
himself a wife — and she clung to this observation as evidence
that the time had passed in which it was possible to resell her. In
June they rented a maroon bridal gown at great expense and held a private
ceremony. There was no way they could register the marriage, for she
was an illegal, and this meant that her son or daughter (please make
it a boy) would not be able to attend school, enter university, drive
a car, or find a job; but that was years away, and she could hope things
would change by then. She received a great number of gifts: a wardrobe,
a new dress, a set of plates, a cutting board and several knives, clothes
from a cousin who worked in the market. The women prepared a feast such
as Eun-ju had never seen in her life: many varieties of kimchi,
rice and beans, fern salads, minute salted fish, and bulgogi
— slices of pork and beef fried with garlic and eaten wrapped
in lettuce. The only time she had ever heard of such a feast in North
Korea was at the April Eighth Cooking Festival at the Pyongyang Noodle
House, a festival open only to the senior party leaders (she had not
been allowed to attend the event she was covering); yet she could smell
the food, taste it, as she wrote, hungry. But even then, she had heard
nothing about the delicacy that was served at her wedding, an edible
dog. The slaughter took place in public, in the alley behind her in-laws'
apartment. Looping a noose around the neck of a collie, Young-shik's
father Yun-jong hoisted it by the throat while Young-shik beat it to
death with a stool, and the provisional contentment that Eun-ju had
attained (I am alive, I eat every day, I think I can care for this Young-shik
and he is a decent man) crumbled within. Yun-jong set to butchering
the dog with quick slices of the knife, skinning the fur off the tallowy
ribcage, and Young-shik gave his bride a proud glance, knowing that
dog would have been beyond the means of any but the richest in North
Korea, strays long ago having been eaten. But only when he wiped the
sweat from his sockets (first on one shoulder, then the other) did he
see his wife's face as she fled indoors.
He followed her upstairs, through the apartment, and out onto the balcony,
where he comforted her while trying not to attract any more attention
than a groom normally draws while whispering to his bride in view of
everyone with his face spattered in dog's blood.
"What's the matter?"
"It's nothing. It will pass." Eun-ju smiled. If the Democratic
People's Republic teaches one anything, it is to perfect a public face
of joy and optimism, whatever fires burn within.
"You're upset about the dog."
"I've just never seen that before."
"You're too innocent for a farmwife. That's your problem."
The thought pleased Young-shik, and before returning to his task he
squeezed her hand. He left blood on it.
The panic slowly subsided, and she calmed herself thinking of Young-shik.
He is a good man, he is, he is. You cannot ask for more than decency
and a rugged handsomeness too, especially when you consider what might
have awaited you here. And the capacity of his mind is surprising for
an unlettered man. I can be happy with him. Maybe I already am. Maybe
this is all happiness is. Not being hungry. Not being beaten. Not lying.
They both drank too much that day, and they barely
made it home on his motorbike, wobbling around the corners, laughing,
sounding his horn as they zipped past a car that had broken down by
the road. But that night it was Young-shik's turn for insomnia. He started
awake as a lightning storm marched in, and he could not believe his
foolhardiness, driving drunk, blaring his way through town. Eun-ju moaned
in her sleep. Gently he took her hand. He was not blind to the sadness
that lay upon her like a heavy cloak, and it dawned on him that he had
purchased a bottomless reservoir of pain along with a bride. Rain pelted
the windows, and the lightning flashed, defining her face in a blue
relief. Moments later (two, three, four) thunder rattled the windows.
Young-shik was desperately afraid of losing her.
Eventually she rolled over and issued a little gasp. She was crying.
He asked, "What's the matter, Ju?"
"Nothing."
"Was the wedding a disappointment?"
"No, it was wonderful."
"Honey, I am sorry the dog upset you."
"The dog doesn't matter. I like dog. It just reminded me of something."
"Of what?"
For a long time Eun-ju did not answer. Just as he concluded that she
had fallen asleep, her voice came from the electrostatic dark, "There
was this boy who somehow stole a cake from Kang, a local party leader
who had gotten rich reselling the rice donated by the imperialist aggressors
— he was selling a kilo for one-hundred fifty won: two months'
wages. I don't know how it happened, whether the boy broke into Kang's
apartment or stole it from his car or what, but he came running down
the street, saw it was a dead end, and panicked and banged through the
door of this state store — you see such places in Korea, the shelves
bare nowadays save for candles, matchsticks, maybe a bottle of vegetable
oil, some Victorious Vodka. It was a frightening sight — this
little stick figure crouching between the radiator and a bench, choking
down frosting like a wild animal. Then Kang came puffing in. 'Spit it
out, you little traitor,' he said. The boy swallowed. Kang seized the
bench and battered him again and again, staved the boy's skull in. He
left the body there in a pool of violet for the shopkeeper to dispose
of. This was not hard to do. This was at the height of the famine."
"You saw all this."
He felt a movement: a nod.
"You get so you don't feel," Eun-ju said. "I hadn't thought
of it in a long time. So many things happen. Everyone's hungry."
He had always avoided asking how she had gotten to China, fearing that
it would include details that he could not bear to hear. But now he
inquired: "Surely it was no easy thing to flee the country?"
"My father had connections; he was the one who sold me."
Young-shik sat up, hugging his knees.
"I agreed," she said. "There was no other way. I could
have died there, and the family was desperate. I told you my father
had cancer."
He nodded with his chin on his knees.
"Papa used to be a top railroad official — so was my mom
before she passed away, for that matter; she has been to Russia several
times to work with her counterparts in Khasan and Vladivostok. But because
of his illness he hasn't worked since before the People's Supreme Court
hanged the Seven Lackeys of the Imperialists and their Southern Stooges
in Kim Il-sung Stadium. I'm sure you heard all about that. No? They
said the world media was following it. As it happened, Papa had worked
closely with two of the traitors before their execution. There was a
time when we lived in terror that he would be arrested, too. Perhaps
with Papa's illness, he was out of the way and the organs decided it
wasn't worth pursuing him. I'm speculating. In any case, things became
very hard for us after that. Mama had already passed away by then. For
me, there were struggle sessions at work. We felt something was coming,
that I would soon be arrested. But Papa knows certain wealthy men of
influence, military officers, party members who were active disassembling
factories and selling lathes and machining tools to China as scrap.
He is very sick, and he spends his days lying in our two-room apartment,
wan and skeletal. I used to sit with him massaging his limbs where they
hurt. The blackouts last eighteen, twenty hours a day in the residential
districts, and the central heating has hardly worked since I was a girl,
so he lies there in his outdoor coat, heaped with blankets, his mouth
fixed in an expression of rage and bewilderment. He is a very good man,
a brave man, and now he is in pain all the time — never sleeps
more than forty-five minutes at a time. Slept. Sometimes I'm afraid
he has passed away by now."
There was another long pause in her story, and when a flash illuminated
a glittering trail on her cheek, Young-shik wiped it away.
"The apartment always smelled of illness, of medicine, of ginseng
snake wine, burning ginger, moxibuxion cotton. But in the end there
was no money for food or medicine. We talked many times about what our
options were, and I agreed with Papa that finding a husband in China
was the best one. Still, it was a shock to come home from work one Friday
and find a man squatting there in a Chinese suit and white socks and
a watch that hung loose on his wrist. His face shone with health —
the fat cheeks and pellucid eyes of one who has never starved. 'Last
time I saw you, you were just a little girl, and look at you now,' he
said. It was Kang. Obviously he did not remember or notice that I had
been there when he killed the boy. I glanced at Papa in alarm, but he
wouldn't meet my eye.
"Kang scrutinized me. Astonishingly, he began prodding my ribs.
'She's thin,' he said.
"Papa replied, 'We eat simply, she is a good cook in these hard
times and can produce a delicious dinner from those bark noodles and
grass mixed with maybe a couple tablespoons of rice when it's available.
I do not complain; as the Dear Leader says, we must toughen ourselves
in the battle against the American aggressor. But she will fatten up
when she gets real food again.'
"'The question is, is she healthy? No diseases? I see you are a
sick man yourself, Comrade Lee.'
"'Oh, she's very healthy," Papa said. He gave me this despairing
glance. 'She has always been a good girl and a party member. No boyfriends,
nothing serious.'
"'How old is she?' Kang said.
"'Twenty-two,' I said.
"He glanced at me. 'She seems older.'
"'She's hungry. Everybody is.'
"'We will say twenty-two. She's a beautiful girl, no obvious blemishes.
Yes, I think we can find her a husband. If only she were fourteen or
fifteen, we might find her a wealthy man indeed. As it is, I can give
you seven hundred fifty won or five kilos of rice. Your choice.'
"Papa chose the rice. The family was hungry and he could also barter
it. Kang gave me a half hour to pack, but there was nothing to take.
A bra, a pair of underwear, my red diploma (Bong-il threw that away;
it was dangerous, evidence I wasn't
Chinese).
I sat with my father before I left, and we wept. There's something deep
inside him I could never reach: I think he is a religious believer,
maybe a Christian (I once heard I had a great uncle who was a priest);
but he would never talk to me about it, not until that moment, when
he hugged me and whispered, 'I'll pray for you.' Kang and I left for
the border that night."
Young-shik lay back down. The thunderstorm was tramping away, its flashes
distant now, the thunderclaps insufficient to rattle the windows, a
faint rumble now.
"Are you angry at me," he asked, "for buying you?"
Yes I am, she wanted to say. I am not a piece of furniture, a bicycle,
a cake. I am angriest of all because I am unable to hate you, because
I might even love you, because I'm afraid I would love any man who provided
for me and showed a little gentleness after such deprivation. However,
she only said, "How can I be angry? Without you I'd be dead."
"It's not the way I would have chosen to find you, but it turned
out right in the end, eh? I thought I would live my whole life alone,
that I would never find a wife. And then I was so afraid that I'd spend
all this money and we'd hate each other's guts. I know it was hard for
you, but you did your duty, helping your family. And if we make some
money off this crop, maybe we can get a little cash to your family.
Everything will work out. We can get treatment for your father. Maybe
we can bring him here. Do you think they'd allow that if we bribe somebody?"
Young-shik slipped his hand inside the blouse of her pajamas and stroked
her abdomen. Did he suspect that she was pregnant? No, he was tracing
a line from her navel down to the thicket that led in a narrowing triangle
to a cleft in the sandstone, to the alabaster cavern with its well of
myrrh, slipping two fingers inside.
She rolled toward him, grasped him gently, began a motion of the wrist,
up and down. She said, "You won't ever sell me, will you, honey?"
Stunned, he pinned her shoulders to the mattress and said, "Ju,
how can you ask that after today? My entire family —"
"Because Bong-il told me —"
"Hush," Young-shik said. Then humbly, as if fearing where
such a declaration might lead, he said to a woman for the first time
in his adult life, "I love you."
"Darling," Eun-ju said as her husband unbuttoned her blouse,
"you know I love you."
Perhaps she meant it. In any case, what else could one say?
4
Two days later, Young-shik set off at dawn, four o'clock
in summer in this part of China, and by the time Eun-ju had left to
go shopping, he was twenty kilometers away, slowly driving a heap of
vegetables into town past a long line of peasants on their backwards
tricycles while the trucks rattled by spilling gravel. As she walked
home with a duffel bag full of groceries she was preoccupied with thoughts
of her family in Hongwan. She recalled a memory from two decades ago,
her father saying, "Up!" and throwing her almost into the
blurry canopy of blossomy trees in Stalin Park, then she came rushing
down toward his big eyes and open mouth, to be caught only at the last
moment. "Again!" she cried. "Again, Daddy!" It was
one of her earliest memories, but then as she tried to cling to it,
strangely, it was as if she were stationary and Papa were being cast
away from her, and now, walking along a dirt road in Manchuria, she
was seized by the conviction that he had died. He would be lying in
his coffin — his blue pallid face, the mortification that ages
the body when the spirit departs, so that within hours he would appear
to be ninety and not fifty-two — and she heard the state burial
liturgy, the name of the Father and the Son, the Great Leader and the
Dear Leader, blessed duality, and heading down Central Street with a
heavy duffel of food, she grieved at the ubiquity of mourning during
a general famine that would have drowned out any sorrow over the death
of one middle-aged cancer victim. She had just left the main road for
the warren of alleyways where she lived when someone grabbed her from
behind.
"Get in," he said.
"Let me go!"
"Get in."
Bong-il. Shoving her toward the Land Cruiser. His driver too, along
with a powerful man who pinned her other arm behind her back.
"I'll scream. Help!"
"You want to scream?" Bong-il said. "You want the cops
to come. Go ahead."
Eun-ju said nothing.
"So shut up and get in the car."
Bong-il settled beside her while the bodyguard and the driver claimed
the front seats, and he removed a handful of sunflower seeds from his
pocket as the vehicle accelerated. The odors of sweat and after-shave
filled the interior. He stuck a few seeds in his mouth and began cracking
them, separating them with his tongue, plucking the husks from his lips
to flick out the window.
"Want some?"
She ignored this. "What do you want with me?"
"Don't look so angry. It's good news. I came back to rescue you
from a life of drudgery. I couldn't get you out of my mind, particularly
after I saw you on your so-called wedding day. You didn't notice me?
I thought you did, the way you started. I was driving by, and I caught
a glimpse of this vision of beauty, in that dress of yours, standing
on the balcony, and I had my driver pull over. You can't imagine how
stunned I was. Your hair's coming in fine, very pretty at that length
— very modern. And I thought, I was right all along about that
girl. I should have trusted my instincts and held onto you for a while
longer. And then this fuckwit farmer comes out in his borrowed suit
and starts tugging at your arm, and if I may say so, it was obvious
you were downright peeved at him. Poor girl. Life is a long, long time
to spend with someone you hate."
"I don't hate him."
Bong-il laughed and popped another pinch of seeds in his mouth. "So
anyway, I had an idea: a kidnapping. I'm taking you off the hands of
this farmer, putting you in a place where you'll have a better life,
maybe a little spending money for clothes and baubles if you're a good
girl. I've got a better man for you."
"I don't want anyone else."
"Shut up. It's me. Do you understand? I already have a wife, but
she's just a stupid little girl and she won't get in your way. You can
imagine what it's like to be married to a teenager. Music, hair, parties.
I told her we need another maid, but you don't need to take orders from
her. Only from me. Who knows? Maybe if things turn out well, I'll sell
her, and it will just be us, you and me."
"My husband is going to find me."
"Husband? Oh, you mean the guy who bought you for three thousand
three hundred yuan? Fuck the stupid farmer. If I'm feeling generous
and you don't irritate me too much, maybe I'll find him a replacement
bride. What do you care? You saw where I live, a mansion, almost. You'll
stay there with me. Your new master. Haha, your Dear Leader."
The Land Cruiser was doing sixty-five kilometers an hour when Eun-ju
stepped out. For a moment she was tumbling on the abrading gravel. Then
a concrete pinnacle rose from the road and struck her head, and an inkwell
exploded before her eyes.
5
On his first day back from his vacation, Inspector
Yang with the Foreign Crimes Unit received an order to carry out his
least favorite duty: returning a refugee. He found the woman in the
dispensary cell, where the doctor, himself an ethnic Korean, at first
argued that she could not possibly be handed over in this condition;
but he was a state budget worker, and when his duty was made clear by
the garrison commander, he signed her release papers. Yang escorted
the prisoner, handcuffed and bandaged, to a taxicab outside, where the
driver was instructed to head for the border. The two men passed the
time chatting in Chinese, which the girl, it was obvious, did not understand.
Inspector Yang was glad that the driver was a Han; they understood the
necessity of this kind of work. "Those Koreans would overrun the
whole region if you guys didn't stop them," the driver said. "There
wouldn't be a single human being from the DMZ to the Tumen River. They'll
all be here." Yang nodded, but it was an uncomfortable ride. He
glanced at the prisoner, the black eyes, the bloodied ear, the arm in
a sling. The girl was so frightened, it was as if she was in shock.
All the way to the border, sixty kilometers, she stared ahead, saying
nothing.
They stopped for a half hour to fill out a sheaf of papers at the border
guard station on the Chinese side, then walked across the bridge to
the halfway point, where the borderline was painted on the asphalt.
It was summer now, and she was wearing no coat, and so she arrived without
her medal of the Great Leader, an act of treason in itself. The North
Korean border guard did not even wait until the prisoner was on his
side of the line before smashing her in the eye with his fist.
"Did you like fucking those Chinese?" he said.
Eun-ju began weeping, gulping out sobs that had been building up for
months, for years, for decades, for at that moment she was elderly,
burdened by grief, by pain, by isolation, by men, by the prospect of
dying alone in a very small place. It occurred to her now that she had
never told Young-shik she was pregnant.
Inspector Yang watched as the border guard dragged the girl to a garrison
on the other bank and shoved her through the door. Sighing, he returned
to his taxi and said, "Let's get out of here."
The driver had seen everything from the shore and he said, "They're
all shits, North Koreans."
The inspector bit his pen. Somehow it seemed disloyal to the fraternity
of men in uniform to acknowledge this comment.
"Maybe she'll find her way back," the driver said. "I
hear it happens. They bribe their way out."
Yang shrugged. "Somebody should do something," he said vaguely.
"It always ends like this."
Russell
Working, a freelance writer based in Limassol, Cyprus, lived for five
years in Vladivostok, Russia. He has traveled widely in China and the
Far East, and his fiction and journalism have appeared in the Atlantic
Monthly, The New York Times, The Paris Review, and dozens of other
publications. He won the Iowa Short Fiction Award for his 1987 collection,
Resurrectionists. This story was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
Back to Selections
Subscriptions