Chapter 184
Life, Once Again!
âWhereâs Senior Moonjoong, by the way?â Maru asked as he sat down.
âHe said he needed to think, so he went out,â Suyeon answered.
âAt this time?â
Was the man walking on a mountain at one in the morning?
âI think he just wants to organize his thoughts from somewhere quiet. More importantly, howâs the gamjatang? Good, right?â
âBit salty for me.â
As soon as Maru responded, Gwak Joon followed up with âdefinitely saltyâ. Suyeonâs eyebrows rose up a little bit.
âDonât eat it if you donât want to. You know you look like an asshole if you complain about food though, right?â
Suyeon smirked. Gwak Joon immediately got up to grab cereal and milk from the fridge.
âWant some?â
âYes please.â
Maru would gladly eat blocks of salt if it was for âherâ, but definitely not for Suyeon. He poured the cereal in milk and topped it with some almonds.
âYouâre too much.â
âI hear that a lot. Letâs go upstairs.â
Gwak Joon told Geunsoo that he would be taking Maru for the time being. Geunsoo tried to get up as well but sat back down upon receiving Suyeonâs glare.
âUgh, the men here are all just...â
Maru and Gwak Joon got to the second floor, leaving Suyeon to fume by herself downstairs. They entered a room that was a distance away from the staircase.
âCome in.â
Maru followed the man inside, there were two desks and a single bed inside. One of the desks matched the overall design of the villa and the other one was a well-used, beaten steel desk.
âI canât write if Iâm not on that desk,â Gwak Joon said, pointing at the steel desk.
He seemed to be the type that couldnât work without certain things, Maru encountered such people in his officer worker days as well: the employee who became nervous without her doll on the desk, the supervisor who needed to have his family picture on the table, and the vice president who always needed to sign contracts with a fountain pen.
âItâs almost dreamlike, but I did live through those moments.â
Maru briefly recalled faint memories of those people before they faded away as quickly as they came. He looked at Gwak Joonâs desk with a sense of deja vu as a result, he could feel the authorâs energy almost emanating from the table. The post-its that were stuck all over the table, the edges that became blackened from overuse, the drafts that were strewn all over it, and the laptopâ¦
âYou were writing a novel?â
âWhen I canât type on the laptop, I escape to paper. It does make for a nice change of pace.â
It was an interesting use of the word âescapeâ for Maru, he nodded as he walked towards the windowsill with its opened windows. The wind blowing inside was cold, but the air coming from the mountain was very refreshing.
âThis is a good place to write.â
âYes, I agree.â
They didnât continue their conversation until after they both finished eating.
âThat part from before⦠Did you think of it on the spot?â
Gwak Joon asked as he put the empty bowl on the wooden table.
âNo. I started thinking the part needed a fix on my fifth read. Itâs not weird without the fix though.â
âNo, that part you caught is definitely a mistake.â
âA mistake?â
âA mistake that happened when I exchanged drafts with the editor, the final draft was one where the daughter hangs off of the grandfather. Itâs written a little less dramatic than the way you put it though, I didnât want her approaching a bloody old man for the sake of survival.ââI see.â
For sure, having the daughter scramble backwards out of fear would be more realistic than her hugging the old manâs waist.
âBut by mistake, you mean...â
âThey ended up printing from one of the past drafts. It was a mistake. Well, my mistake. I shouldâve read it one last time before I gave the go-ahead for the print.â
âCan you fix it on the second print?â
âThereâs no way my work would get a second print. The world of novels is a very competitive place.â
âBut donât you think you might get a chance if your movie succeeds?ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âThat would be nice. I would be able to focus solely on writing if it did. I thought it was funny hearing that you needed money to write in the past, but Iâm really suffering because of it now.â
Maru knew that many authors had trouble earning money. It would be best for the author to live solely off of money from their publications, but he did hear that most authors worked multiple jobs to survive.
âFor sure, opening other peopleâs wallets is a very difficult thing.ââYou sound like a know-it-all.â
âI worked part-time in the past.â
Among other things. Maru glanced at the post-it notes on the steel table, they must be ideas for Gwak Joonâs next projects. The notes were filled with odd scribbles. âGunâ, âYum yum yumâ, etc... What would he do there? Stuff like that.
âWere you writing your next novel?â
âNovel? No way. I was just scribbling my daydreams.â
âTwilight Struggles was almost too good to be just called a daydream. I did read it ten times after all.â
Gwak Joon smiled lightly at that, Maru felt as if he just caught something rare from the man.
âYou were auditioning, I heard?â
âHow did you know?â
âMr. Moonjoong told me that he had a kid he wanted to work with.â
âWow, how troublesome. That makes me nervous already.â
âNervous? You donât seem like the type that gets nervous.â
The man glanced at Maru through his horn-rimmed glasses, he had very good senses. In the end, Maru gave in and told the man he wasnât nervous at all.
âThe delinquent role, correct?â
âYes.â
âAre you preparing for it in any way?â
âOther than reading the book? No. I donât even know what to prepare for since I know nothing of auditions.â
The number of people he would be auditioning in front of, how many lines heâd need to act out, if he needs to mix in movement⦠He knew none of it. He knew heâd have to pay attention to it one way or the other, but he was busy enough as is with the acting club.
âI donât know how auditions work either, so I canât tell you much on that front. I can, however, tell you my thoughts when I wrote your character though.â
Gwak Joon sat on the table and motioned Maru close to him, he picked up one of the notebooks on the corner of the table.
âThis was what inspired me to write Twilight Struggles.â
It was a little scrap of an article from a newspaper, a case of murder. Maru remembered it, it was about a young man who planned out his parentsâ murder during desperate times amidst a financial crisis.
âDo you know the backstory of this case?â
âWasnât he caught? I know he had to serve his sentence.â
âThatâs the end result, but the story that took place to the end was incredibly sad. The mother called the insurance company when she was stuck in her flaming house at her last moments. She checked that her son would receive the money on her death. She apparently sighed in relief when she got confirmation.â
â......â
âThatâs what made the insurance company wonder if this was a fraud. They launched an investigation and thatâs how they found out that this was first-degree murder.â
It was a heavy story. The son sold his parents to survive while the parents worried for their child until the very end.
âThatâs when I became curious. Would all parents sacrifice themselves for their children? How would parents that gave away their everything to let their children live on feel? What if they regretted their decision?â
âSo that was the start of the novel.â
âThatâs right. âTwilight Strugglesâ is a novel that had all familial love stripped away from it. There is no joy in this novel. Everyone walks to their own path of self-destruction until the very end. But there is one person who smiles at the end.â
âThe⦠old man.â
âThatâs right. As a result, the movie I envisioned was something absolutely filled with madness. I hoped that all of the characters would be overtaken by insanity. The moment an old manâs hope in a crumbling gray city shatters, the movie starts accelerating to its eventual doom.â
Gwak Joon flipped the page on the notebook, he flipped through several pages of scribbles before reaching a certain page.
âThis is the delinquent.â
There was just a single word and a drawing on that page. A revolver and a word reading âtriggerâ below it.
âI spoke with the scenario writer and the storyboard author. The delinquent appears for thirty seconds in the movie and his lines are only ten seconds long. But that thirty seconds is critical to the movieâs story.â
Gwak Joon raised his head, his eyes were filled with confidence for his story.
âI told everyone who joined this project to give these thirty seconds to me because this is the moment that blows life into this story. As I wrote this book, I spent a full month editing the delinquentâs lines. I wanted to keep working on it, actually. Even now, I still want to keep working on it. Thatâs why I want the actor for this role to be crazy, like me.â
Maru was faced with a passionate soul. The man looked like a crow on the outside, but inside, the man was like a molten core. His fervour was almost palpable. Then again, that was probably why he could write a novel like this in the first place.
âItâs an important hint, isnât it?â
âConsider a gift from a like-minded person. I judge people purely based on their first impressions. I donât believe second or third impressions truly matter. In that sense, I like you. Iâd like to see you act out that scene.â
âBut you donât know much about me at all.â
âI just said, I judge people based on their first impressions.â
Gwak Joon handed Maru his notebook.
âRead this. And try it. There are lots of people downstairs you can ask for help from in terms of the audition. I donât particularly like the woman, but she is very talented.â
Maru nodded.
âCan you just give something like this to me, by the way? Donât you need this?â
Gwak Joon raised a finger to his head and poked it.
âItâs all in here. The paper was only necessary to organize my ideas.â
â...Ah, yes.â
Maru couldnât even say anything in response with how confident the man sounded. He took a look at the notebook before realizing there was a familiar âSâ logo written on it, it was from Seoul university. Flipping the notebook, he realized it was from the law faculty.
âUm, this school...â
âI lost interest in the middle, so I dropped out.â
âDropped out of Seoul Universityâs law school?â
âWhy?â
Maru looked at Gwak Joon with a slight smile, perhaps this manâs writing was filled with madness because the man himself was slightly crazy.
âTo think heâd drop out of a dream school for practically everyone in Korea...â
The world really was unfair. How could it just give all the talent in the world to someone like him?