Chapter 3
Life, Once Again!
âIâm a healer. We should play a round together some time.â
âSure.â
As they kept talking, eventually came the time for the second class. The Korean teacher that walked in had a bit of a square jaw with long wavy hair. He looked a bit peculiar, to be honest.
âNice to meet you. Iâm Park Moonjung, and Iâll be teaching you kids literature for the next year. I know none of you will bother remembering my name anyway, so just call me literature teach.â
The man leaned over the podium as he scanned the classroom. Unlike with his homeroom teacher, Maru couldnât help but grin when he saw this teacher. He mustâve had many good memories with this person.
âYouâre a bit disappointed, arenât you? Since there are no girls here.â
â.....â
No one answered. It was the first day, after all. And it wasnât like Maru was a social type either. Plus, the teacher actually felt quite a bit younger than him, making him hesitant.
âGuys, come on. We canât become friends if you donât talk. Tell me, you guys are disappointed because there are no girls in your class, right?â
âYes.â
A few of the kids responded with a smile.
âI do feel for you a little. Spending your youth in a classroom that smells like sweat for a year⦠What a waste. Why did you guys choose electrical engineering to begin with? Should have gone to art or design. Those are pretty much half boys and half girls. Ah, drawing has more girls now, actually.â
âReally?â
âNo girls at all in ELEN?â
More of the students were talking now.
âOf course not. Unfortunately. Told ya, the only thing waiting for you in the near future arenât flowers. Itâs just sweat.â
âWow...â
âThatâs why you kids need to be especially careful in choosing your clubs. If you end up going into sports, you arenât going to have a chance at seeing women at all for all three years.â
Right then, one of the more playful looking kids raised their hand.
âSo what are the clubs with the most girls in them?â
âGood question! People need to know how to ask questions like these if they want to live an easy life. Applaud him, guys.â
Clap clap clap.
The teacher had a thing for making class seem recreational. Maru clapped enthusiastically as well.
âClubs with girls⦠First of all, thereâs the manga club. Theyâre the people that sell drawings and cosplay during festivals. They have a few girls there. Thereâs also the origami club. And then the movie review club. Iâm probably going to be the advisor for that club this year. Always gets quite a number of girls. Especially since itâs a club where you just go to theaters to watch movies. The drawing clubâs nice, too.â
âWhich one would you recommend?â
âHm, donât know. We got a lot of girls this year, so pretty much any club would do. Even mech got 5 girls! Of course, elen has 0.â
With that,
âAh, weâve been cursed.â
âJust men?â
More kids opened their mouths one by one. Maru tried searching through his memories one more time. He was fairly sure there was a girl in his class when he was going to school.
He couldnât remember anything about her, but there was definitely a girl.
âSo not everything stays the same.â
It didnât seem like a perfect rollback. Perhaps several other things changed other than the fact that the year was 2003.
âMost things stayed the same, but a few minor things seems to have changed.â
After some more casual talk with the teacher, the kids began to introduce themselves one by one. The teacher asked the students for their name, goals for the year, and things they wanted to say to the class.
âIâm...â
âHey guys...â
âThis is embarrassing...â
Maru waited as he observed a set of familiar and unfamiliar faces in the class.
âAnyhow, letâs have a good time together for the next year.â
Dojin finished his introduction.
âLastly⦠Oh, Maru! Thatâs a pure Korean word, isnât it? I like it.â
As expected of the Korean teacher, he seemed to know the meaning of his name. Maru answered with a âyesâ and stood up. He was around 175cm tall. It was considerably tall for the kids in his class. Of course, Maru was well aware that he wouldnât grow much more after this.
âMm, my nameâs Maru Han. Iâd like to live fairly quietly for my first year. Letâs get along.â
âQuiet, huh. Nice. Alright, you can sit now.â
Maru finished his introduction in a simple fashion. The teacher moved onto talking about his first love that no one asked about and wrapped up the class nicely. The kids seemed a lot more fond of him than the homeroom teacher. Everyone was having fun. Well, save the few that was muttering stuff like âguy talks too muchâ under their breaths.
âHe seems like a fun guy.â
âAgreed.â
The first period ended relatively safely. Maru took a look at the other kids during break time. Was it because he had the eyes of an adult? The kids around him all looked young and cute. Even the ones that were trying to look tough.
âGirls, though, huh.â
Maru recalled to the time when he proposed to her in the past. He gave her the ring saying that heâd propose to her again even in the next life. His wife laughed about it whenever she looked back at it.
âWell, I guess Iâm fine with dating her.â
He was living a new life. Might as well have a fun time while he was at it. Though, there would be a few hurdles to pass in the future.
âAh, entrance exams and the military...â
Entrance exams were fine. He was fine with studying for them. Compared to everything else in life, studying was quite easy for him. But the militaryâ¦
âAh⦠Sergeant Kim, that son of a bitch.â
Dojin flinched when he heard Maru curse under his breath.
âEh? Ah? Did you say that to me?â
âNo, I just remembered something.â
âOh, I see.â
Dojin smiled awkwardly.
âItâs still several years away, so letâs think about it then.â
Re-enlistment. His hair rose up in fright when he thought of it, but he couldnât do anything about it. Unless the country reunited again, at the very least. The third class passed, and soon the fourth class followed suit. The two new teachers started their classes fairly normally. The only weird one was the Korean teacher, really.
âNow itâs lunch, cleanup, and home!â
Dojin shouted in joy. School finished at 2pm since it was only the first day.
âWhere do we eat?â
âYou see that gymnasium under construction over there? Itâs right under there.â
Maru remembered himself running there almost daily when Dojin told him this.
âYou know a lot about the school already, donât you?â
âI looked around during break time.â
What a guy. He started walking towards the cafeteria with Dojin. The school was shaped like a capital âLâ. One side was the main building with all the classes, and the other side had all the labs. The cafeteria was next to the lab building. It was quite loud with all the new construction happening upstairs.
âWe canât even use that thing even if it completes.â
âNo way.â
âIâm telling ya, the only exercise weâre going to get is from cleaning it.â
âHow the hell would you know that?â
âCall it really good instinct.â
Maru looked up at the unfinished gymnasium with a grin. The principal used quite a bit of money building it, but he ended up blocking it off after it completed. They only really used it for festivals. As a matter of fact, the only reason for students to visit it was to clean it up.
Maru remembered his friends complaining about having to clean up a place they didnât even use all the time. Fond memories.
He left the gymnasium behind him and went down to the cafeteria. Thankfully, the lines werenât very long today. The menu today was fried fish, doenjang soup, and spicy braised tofu.
âPoop soup.â
âWhat soup?â
âOh, I meant doenjang soup.â
Maru looked for other kids in his class.
âOver there.â
Since most of them at least knew each otherâs faces, they were all gathered around one table. The same went for other classes. No one really knew each other, though, so lunch was fairly quiet. Maru knew very well that this wouldnât last, of course. High schoolers were very loud creatures.
âBlegh.â
Dojin frowned after his first sip of the soup. He didnât seem to like it. Maru wasnât much of a picky eater, so he was able to eat it well.
âThen again, I found military food pretty tasty as well.â
Maru walked out after lunch to notice a few seniors running around the field. On one side they were playing soccer, and on the other, basketball. With kids from different classes getting mixed up everywhere, the field looked incredibly chaotic to him.
âHoo boy, itâs a lot worse than middle school.â
Dojin clicked his tongue in surprise as he watched. Maru felt otherwise.
âItâs the military.â
A bunch of kids with short hair were running around with all their strength. If you just took the occasional girl out of the equation, it really looked like the military.
âAh, right. Thatâs why we called this place the barracks.â
It was a really fitting nickname. Maru stepped back into the classroom. The sunlight was streaming in through the windows along with the cold air of march. The kids near the windows were already fast asleep. The lot of them were still awkward around each other, but thatâd change in a week. Most would form friend groups with each other save for a few outsiders.
âWe had a few here, too.â
He couldnât remember all too well, but there were a few outsiders in the class. Though they managed to form their own group in the end.
âI guess they were similar to bread shuttle in a way. Though the term didnât really exist yet.â
âWhat?â
Dojin perked up with a curious look.
âJust talking to myself.â
âWhy do you keep talking to yourself? Talk to me too, bro.ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âJust go back to sleep. You look sleepy.â
âTrue that, I am sleepy.â
Dojin slumped back down on his desk.
* * *
âDonât be late. Weâre going to start cleaning out designated areas starting tomorrow, so remember that. Just go back home and study, you hear? Iâd hate to see your sorry faces in some weird place outside school. The end.â
The teacher exit the room after smacking the board lightly with his board. The kids stood up tiredly from their seats.
âWhere do you live?â
âGuwol-dong.â
âThatâs pretty far. Do you bus here?â
âBike.â
âDonât you feel cold?â
âYeah, but itâs cheaper for sure.â
âFair enough.â
âSee you tomorrow.â
Maru waved as he left the classroom. The first day went by well. He thought he might make a few mistakes due to his memory, but that never actually happened. Everything felt nostalgic though. Maru changed direction on his way home and went into one of the smaller streets. He was heading to the little PC bang near school.
âThis place never changed.â
He spent quite a bit of money over the three years in high school. His entire friend group would assemble in the PC bang after school whenever one of them said âgo?â. He played Starcraft, Warcraft, and Lineage harder than he ever studied.
âI wonder if Iâd play games in this life.â
Maru turned away from the PC bang as he thought to himself.
A new life.
A fun life.
What would a fun life entail? Maru couldnât quite remember what heâd done for 45 years. He lived for his family after he married, but before that he did things without much of a purpose. He passed the college entrance exams with a decent enough score, so he went straight to college. And after failing his first exam there, he was sent straight to the military. He eventually graduated afterwards, and decided to work all sorts of jobs afterwards.
Jobs.
Maru slowed down a bit. He could see a cloud floating right above him. It resembled a wet tissue paper, moving about in the sky as the winds willed it to. Maru thought his life resembled the cloud a fair bit.
âI didnât think I lived a bad life⦠But I didnât really life a good one either, huh.â
Work before dreams. Things he had to do came before things he wanted to do. He never took risks, and he never looked far off into the future either.
Tsk.
Maru clicked his tongue without even realizing it. He did do fun things. He did experience happy things. But there was nothing that could sum up his life in one word. Well, he did have one.
So-so.
If anything, his life was just so-so.
âHow do I want to live?â
That question came at Maru now harder than it ever did in the past 45 years.
* * *
Maru stepped into the house with a heavy face.
âHow was school? Not weird or anything?â
Mom asked him a question after a small pause. She seemed to be a bit worried, what with him having gone to an engineering school and all.
âIâm fine.â
âWhat about the other kids?â
âTheyâre chill.â
âChill?â
âTheyâre all people. It isnât like a prison with criminals in it or anything. Donât worry about it. Iâm not going to do anything weird, they arenât doing anything weird.â
âS-sure.â
Mom turned away from him with a bit of a surprised look. She mustâve been so surprised with her son being direct all of the sudden. Then again, he never was that direct till he went to the military.