Chapter 308
Life, Once Again!
âSo, did the matter at your school end well?â
âYes, thanks to you, it all ended well.â
âThatâs good. Are the bullied kids still going to school like normal?â
âProbably.â
âProbably?â
âI havenât talked to them after that. From how I see them from time to time at school, I think theyâre doing fine.â
âThatâs a little unexpected. Usually, theyâd come up and say thanks.â
âItâs not something I wanted them to thank me for. Neither they nor I have a reason to get close to each other, so it was only a matter of time before we became like strangers.â
âTo me, that sounds like you didnât do all that out of pity.â
âYeah, well.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âDid the bullies get on your bad side then? Or did they bully you as well? No wait, you definitely arenât the type of guy to be bullied.â
âThereâs a guy that crossed the line. Honestly speaking, if he didnât cause any problems for me, I wouldâve just let them be.â
âI donât say this to young people that much, but thatâs actually better. You need to draw the line between where you want to interfere and where you donât. I donât recommend being kind to everyone to people.â
Maru nodded as he sliced the t-bone steak. His life philosophy was similar to that of lawyer Parkâs. Well, many people probably had similar philosophies with minor differences.
âOh, lawyer Park.â
Just as he was biting into a piece of bread after applying butter on it, a lady who seemed to be in her early forties greeted lawyer Park. Next to her was a pretty child. She seemed to be in elementary school.
âHello. I didnât know Iâd see you here.â
âThe owner of the store is a friend of mine. I came here to visit, but then I saw a familiar face. Yeji, you have to say hello, donât you?â
The little girl politely greeted lawyer Park. The way she put both of her hands on her belly button and bowed was adorable and cute. She then turned towards Maru and greeted him as well. The girlâs mother looked at her daughter with satisfaction.
The woman faintly smiled and had a look at Maru. When she did, lawyer Park introduced Maru to her.
âHeâs someone under a company that a friend of mine runs.â
Since lawyer Park introduced him, Maru couldnât stay still either. He stood up and greeted the woman.
âOh, it looks like I interrupted your meal.â
âNot at all. We were feeling desolate since itâs just two men here. Rather than that, Yeji has grown a lot since the last time I saw her. Is she in her 2nd year of elementary school now?â
âYes.â
âSheâs pretty like her mother.â
âSheesh, there you go again, lawyer.â
The little girl was blinking and staring at the table. She was looking at the piece of bread. She gave a glance to her mother and the lawyer before reaching out to the small piece of bread.
âYeji.â
Seeing that, the girlâs mother calmly scolded her. The girl made a dejected expression before taking away her hand. The mother crouched down and met her eyes on the same level before stroking her cheeks.
âI told you that you shouldnât put your hand on other peopleâs things without permission, didnât I?â
The girl nodded. Seeing that, lawyer Park smiled and grabbed the bread with a napkin before handing it over to the girl.
âWhat do you have to say to lawyer Park now?â
âThank you.â
The girl bowed after receiving the bread. The mother told her âgood girlâ before patting her head.
âLawyer, may I treat you to a meal next time? My husband wants to meet you.â
âSure. Call me any time. Iâm quite free.â
âOkay then, Iâll see you at a later date. Enjoy your meal.â
The little girl then bowed again before leaving.
âThatâs when girls are the cutest. You have less to care about and they are so adorable. Theyâre obedient too.â
âThatâs true. After a couple more years⦠gee, I donât want to even think about it.â
Maru showed an awkward smile to lawyer Park, who was staring at him. He blurted that out loud since he was reminded of his own daughter. After their meal, they went to the counter to pay, and the employee told lawyer Park that their meal was already paid for.
âOh, is that so?â
Lawyer Park put his credit card back inside his wallet. It seemed that that lady from back then had paid for their meal.
âLooks like I have to go to their next invitation no matter what,â lawyer Park spoke as he walked out of the restaurant.
Maru got in the car when he told him that heâd give him a ride home.
âThat was a decent meal, wasnât it?â
âI really had a nice time. Iâm even thinking about bringing my parents here next time.â
âThatâs good. The dressing isnât that strong, so adults like it as well. The steak seasoning is also tailored to fit our taste buds.â
âBut how much does it cost to get a course meal like the one we just had?â
âAround 300 thousand.â
âThen thatâs 150 thousand per person, huh. How expensive.â
âNo, I meant 300 thousand per person.â
â....â
Maru felt as though the food inside his stomach was suddenly expanding in size. He ate 300 thousand wonâs worth of food in one sitting? It wasnât like he drank any alcohol either. All he had were some vegetables, bread, soup, seafood, a steak and some dessert. So even the bread cost five digits?
At the same time, he was reminded of the lady that paid 600 thousand won. Perhaps she asked her friend that she said was the owner of the restaurant?
âAre you thinking about what kind of person she is to pay such a huge sum?â
âWas it that obvious?â
âYouâre quite sensitive when it comes to money. You will go bald if you like money too much when youâre still young. Hm, her husband is a managing director at DK, and she herself is the granddaughter of the chairman of the Korea Daily. In one word, chaebols.â
âThatâs easy enough to understand. Chaebols, huh.â
Maru remembered the mother and daughter that he saw at the restaurant as he put his seatbelt on. Chaebols. It was a word that appeared very frequently in the news and popular magazine journals. It was also a word that brought the public outrage of the ordinary people. Maru himself did not have any good feelings towards the word chaebol either. It wasnât a surprise, since all the news about them were about embezzlement, business malpractices to gain illegal profits, secret funds and mostly any crime related to money.
However, a real chaebol he saw for himself was just like anyone else, no in fact, was more polite than most people. Maru wondered if it was because she was talking to a lawyer.
Lawyer Park drove in reverse as he started speaking. Maru just looked forward without showing any expression. He couldnât say bad things about people who were positively acquainted with lawyer Park.
âNot many people see chaebol families in a good light.â
Maru glanced at him.
âThe irony is that everyone wants to become one, yet they despise them. Itâs the chaebols themselves that created this contradiction, so they shouldnât be that surprised. I mean, the chairman of Sungjoo Corp. appeared on TV in a wheelchair. His effort to not get arrested was tear jerking.â
âIâve seen the news as well. It was about the stocks, wasnât it?â
âThey got caught shooting a movie which they did in order to avoid taxes. Itâs interesting. The families that are known as chaebols can dictate a corporation with stocks that often amount to a single digit percentage. I donât know who came up with the idea of circular shareholding, but Iâm sure that person is a genius,â lawyer Park chuckled.
âIn any case, chaebols have a lot of problems, but they mostly try to stay quiet. When problems surface like that, itâs mostly because they didnât do the groundwork properly.â
âGroundwork?â
âWhether it's shady deals or market manipulation, they have to cover their tracks, but details that shouldn't get leaked come out anyway, and then the CEOs suddenly come out in wheelchairs. Oh, Iâm not saying this as a lawyer, but as an ordinary person.â
âAlright.â
âProblems do get found because when youâre the leader of a super large corporation, you will get exposed to the media one way or the other, but their families usually do their best not to be exposed. Do you know what people in power fear the most?â
âWell, losing their power, probably.â
âYes, itâs simple. Thatâs why the people with power watch out for themselves in order to not let go of the power in their hands. The era is changing. The people that supported companies in order to revitalize the country by buying in-house products have started to look for ways to survive on their own. Itâs especially becoming like that ever since the IMF crisis. Thanks to that, the companies watch out for themselves in order to appease the public and not get on their bad side. They might be able to wield power in places with guaranteed secrecy, but they will have to act very politely in places without it.â
Lawyer Park made a very peculiar expression. Maru found out why through the next words he spoke.
âI earn money by going around doing work so that they donât lose any money. I donât like chaebols, but they make up the majority of my clients at our law firm, so I canât exactly hate them. My wife and eldest daughterâs travel expenses, as well as my younger daughterâs tuition comes from their pocket after all. Thatâs why I really canât scold other people. Iâm not in a position where I can speak, so how am I supposed to talk bad about anyone?â
âEveryone has to deal with something like that one way or the other.â
Insulting people in better positions, yet dreaming to become one; complaining about society yet doing their best to be a member of one. This couldnât be helped since the world was one where they would starve to death if they were excluded by others. Chaebol was the ultimate objective of people going to good universities and getting good jobs. Of course, some had other objectives as well. These people usually pursued their own unique goals. However, the underlying system of this nation was geared towards producing laborers that were less defiant and more mechanical, and a laborerâs dream would be to become the head of laborers.
Maru reminded himself of the celebrity prostitution issue that he saw on RBS. An actress claimed that she was called to a successful CEO to have sexual intercourse. It seemed that businesses and the entertainment industry were actually joined together whether it was the good things or the bad things.
âIn dramas, 2nd gen members of chaebols are portrayed as super condescending people, right? Trying to solve everything with money, blackmail, beating people up⦠There are people like that as well. I canât say that there arenât any people like that. But the people Iâve met were all nice people. No, going beyond nice, theyâre na?ve.â
After stopping in front of a red light, lawyer Park put a cigarette in his mouth. He didnât light it up though. He just held it with his lips like a lollipop.
âI used to be in a prosecutorâs office before I entered a law firm. I had to deal with criminal cases like mad. Iâve seen how malevolent humans can be, numerous times. I canât remember the number of times I shook in rage as I wrote indictment bills. Someone that killed their parents, someone that killed their child, someone that ran over a person in a car, rapists, assailants, etc. From what I saw, people raised in harsher environments tend to commit more extreme crimes. There are exceptions, but they just stop caring since their very reality is hell. Also, in cases of homicides, most non-accidental murders were related to money problems.â
Lawyer Park moved his lower jaw to fidget with the cigarette in his mouth before throwing it on the ashtray. Maru saw that the ashtray was filled with cigarettes that hadnât been burned at all.
âI think I get what youâre saying.â
âYou do?â
âYes. Why are the 2nd generation members of rich families pure and na?ve? They might change once they start learning about business in order to participate in it, but they must be really pure and na?ve before that. I mean, they get to be raised in the best of environments without lacking anything, right? They would never have to deal with the problems that would be common for people born and raised in ordinary households.â
âYes, thatâs what it is. They are people that grew up with the best of everything, including education, so theyâre fundamentally polite and kind. Itâs harsh trials that create the flaws in personality, but they donât experience things like that. Though, like I said before, there are those that just act whimsically, but theyâre immediately put to rest with pressure from their older family members.â
A big wobble could be felt. It seemed that they drove over a speed bump.
âDo you know about the celebrity prostitution story thatâs in the news these days?â
âYes. Iâve seen the news.â
âItâs not something I should say to a kid, but Iâll say this to you since youâre a part of it⦠donât get involved with people from companies as much as possible. In the entertainment industry, the ones with power are the advertisers, and advertisers belong to businesses. Meeting them for business is okay, but donât get close to them personally.â
âIâll first become famous and then think about it.â
âHaha, I guess thatâs also true.â
Just then, a phone rang. Lawyer Park answered the call with the hands free mode.
âThis fella, you just called at the perfect moment. Iâm with Maru right now. Why are we together? Things happened. Why did you call me? You want to drink together? You should really watch out for your health. Why donât you drink ginseng tea like you always do? Alright, forget booze. Why donât we go indoor fishing after all this while? You know, like when we were young. Alright, see you then.â
Lawyer Park ended the call. Maru looked outside the window. He saw that he was just passing by a subway station.
âIt sounds like you got an appointment, so Iâll get off here. It will be quite a hassle for you to drive to Suwon and then back to Seoul.â
âI wish I could drive you home, but I guess it will be quite hard on me once it starts getting congested.â
Lawyer Park stopped the car at the edge. Maru got out of the car and said goodbye. He was thankful to him since he had a nice meal and got some help from him as well.
âGood luck with acting.â
âThank you. Be careful on your way.â
Maru turned around after watching the car drive off for a while. He got on the subway and leaned against a pole. He was slicing steak in Cheongdam-dong less than an hour ago, but right now, he was in a crowd of people who were going home from work. He experienced for himself that people could be so physically separated in this small land of South Korea.
âWhat chaebols. Iâm fine as long as I can feed my wife and my child.â
He thought that he would have no relations with them. They lived in a different world after all. Maru thought about the future as he looked outside the subway. The acting competition was about to begin, so he had to concentrate on that. The play was looking much more complete than before, so they would be able to get a prize as long as they did well on the big day.
The subway shook according to a certain rhythm.
Most K-drama fans will know that chaebols refer to extremely rich families that run super large companies as âfamily businessâ. for more info.