"Please don't cry," Sylvie said, gently wiping June's face with her hands. "Please, sweetie. You're going to break my heart."
June steeled herself, rubbing her eyes. She was not going to falter. She was not going cede to childish need, to weakness. "I am sorry, Mrs. Tanner," she said, in her clearest voice. "I am fine."
Sylvie said, "Of course you are. May I tell you something? These months that Reverend Tanner and I have been here, they've been the most joyous times in my life. The reason is being with all of you children. There's nothing else that has given me more happiness, and I'm sure nothing ever will. But above all, most precious to me has been our friendship."
"What about Hector?" June said, unable to help herself. Sylvie bowed her head. She looked at June and said, "I've done many regrettable things, here as in the rest of my life. I don't know if I'll be forgiven. Perhaps you can someday forgive me, but I will not ask you for that. I deserve nothing of the kind. I simply hope you know something about yourself. Early on, I didn't know if I was being unfair to the other children by spending more time with you. My husband certainly thought I should have gone about things differently. But you have always lifted me up. And I see now how much you've grown and changed, in such a short time. I've been watching you the last weeks. You've been so thoughtful, and kind, and wonderfully willing to help some of the younger girls, and I notice how you've now taken Min under your wing. When we were playing the game earlier today, I was so pleased that you wouldn't let Byong-Ok provoke you. You don't even seem to have your famous temper anymore! You've become the girl I always believed you were. And I know only a small bit of that is because of me. It's more because of this place, and everyone's hard work and care, but most of all, it's because of you. No matter what you do or where you go in this world, your undying spirit will see you through. You have a singular perfection, that way. Nothing will ever halt you. But you should know something else, too. You have a great and passionate heart, June, one as capacious as you are strong. Soon, I know, and forever, it'll be full of love's riches."
Sylvie reached over to the shelf that served as a night table and pulled out a book and gave it to June. "I was hoping that you might like to have this. Would you accept it from me? Would you keep it safe, after Reverend Tanner and I have gone?"
June stared at the thin volume in her hands. It was the one covered in blue cloth, the one of the long-ago battle in the long-ago war. Here was the sole possession of Mrs. Tanner's she had truly wanted, and had once stolen, and had given back. And so this is what she would have. This was her prize.
"Yes," she said, gripping it tightly. "Thank you."
She rose to leave. Sylvie hugged her and almost fiercely held on but June did not yield a hair to the embrace, a breath, even a prickle of her skin. How quickly she could check herself. She was only a child but she was a right hard stone. When Sylvie released her, June did not have to look at the woman's face to know that it looked as if it had just been struck, brutally smashed.
June left the cottage. In the twilight the children were coming out of the mess hall, chattering and running around in the last weak lamp of daylight. They streamed past her as she carried the tray of empty bowls, the book pinned under one arm, staring at her for a moment and then fluttering by like the tiny, carefree birds that nested in the bushes and small trees around the orphanage and under the eaves of the buildings. During the summer there had seemed to be scores of the mouse-brown wrens perched about, hundreds of them, but now their numbers had rapidly thinned, culled by the growing scarcity of the season. After returning the tray, June watched the other children, and she thought how their numbers were thinning, too, but rather because of their character, or young age, or plain luck, and that those who remained would be only less fortunate, and grow older, simply settle ever deeper into the fixed molds of their selves, the selves that had already been passed over.
When the bell rang once again, the children scattered and dashed about in a final frenzy before being ushered inside by the aunties. June stayed outside in the leading shadow of the darkness. She crouched on her haunches well beyond the far end of the fi eld, right by the rickety gate, her hands and neck and face steadily stiffening in the chill. One of the aunties called out for her and waited for an answer but didn't call out again. They had become accustomed to not bothering with her. The kerosene lamps were now lighted in the dormitories, the windows aglow on both the boys' and girls' sides. In recent weeks she had indeed helped the youngest girls brush their teeth and dress for bed and had even read to them a few times, but tonight she would stay out until she couldn't bear the cold. Or maybe she would simply remain here, lie down on the hard, gravelly dirt and close her eyes and hope that this would be the night that brought forth winter in its fi rst full, harsh form. She remembered sleeping on the train with the twins, the same icy fi ngers grasping at them as they had huddled tight, and how she had hoped they might get all the way to Pusan without having to march again, to eat again, without fearing any more misery and privation. It was June's decision to climb atop the overcrowded train. Since that night she had often wondered if it would have been better to wait for the next one, or to have taken their chances on foot, or else steered the twins and herself far off the main road without any provisions and simply waited for the one merciful night that would lift them away forever. The twins would not have suffered and she would not be here now. For what had surviving all the days since gotten her, save a quelled belly? She had merely prolonged the march, and now that her new hunger had an altogether different face, it was her heart that was deformed, twisting with an even homelier agony. She was just about to lie down on her side when a kerosene lamp emerged from the main dormitory door, swinging to and fro. From the clipped gait she could tell that it was Min. She didn't move or speak, and she could see him stepping back and forth in the dark, lifting up the lamp to try to see. He headed back to the building but a wind whistled past the sign at the top of the arch and the sound made him turn around and venture out past the field. He must have seen her shape against the thin lines of the gate door, for he lowered the lamp and approached her quickly.
"What are you doing here, noo-nah?" he said, his shoulders hunched up tight against the cold. He was wearing a sweater over his pajamas. He turned down the wick of the lamp. "It's freezing. You should come inside."
She didn't respond. During dinner, before Min disappeared, she had resolved never to speak to him again, or maybe to do worse: she had flashed with a rage, wanting to pummel him, make him plead and cry. But the sight of him slightly limping, the kerosene lamp still too big for his hand, momentarily disarmed her.
"Please come now, noo-nah."
"Just leave me alone."
"I went in the chapel and made the fire in the stove. It's been going for a half-hour already, so it's nice and warm in there."
"Go back inside, then."
"You don't look right. You're going to get sick in this cold. You could die."
"I don't care."
"I do," he said, kneeling down beside her. "And it's not because Byong-Ok might beat me. He doesn't care about me anymore. The others don't care, either. Nobody does."
"You're better off that way."
"Are you still my friend?"
June stood up and began walking away. Her feet were tingling, nearly numb, her fingers cramping, and she thought that she should go now down the dirt road and veer off on a trail deep into the woods, where no one could find her.
"Well, are you?" he asked, following her closely. "I want to know. I don't want to live here anymore if you don't even care about me."
"Why should I?" she said, turning and shoving him roughly. He fell to the ground, just barely keeping the lamp upright. She put her foot on his hand as she stood over him. "I should strangle you. Why did you lie about our being adopted? Didn't you think I'd find out?"
"I didn't know!" he cried, trying to pull his hand away. But she just stepped more heavily on him.
"You're a liar!"
/> "I didn't want to know!" he said wretchedly, trying with his free hand to push her foot away. She let him go and he curled into himself like a wounded snail, holding his hand against his chest. "Isn't it the same for you? Don't you have to make believe, too? Everybody knows I've got little chance, with my foot. Not when there are so many others with nothing wrong with them."
"There's nothing wrong with me," she said, clutching the collar of his sweater. "Not with me!"
"Nothing?" he said, and almost laughed. "You can say it ten thousand times over, but it's not going to make it true. You're the way you are. Everybody knows it. The way you'll always be. You're trouble, just like me."
She grabbed him by the throat with both hands, her fi ngers monstrously vitalized by the heat of his neck, his windpipe like the gently ribbed sections of a delicate reed, and had he not turned his face to the lamp, revealing the willing forfeit fl ooding his eyes, she might not have let go.
But she did. Min coughed horribly, shudderingly low, as if he were a dying old man, and after he regained his breath she got him up on her back and carried him to the main building. The chapel was lit by the bright honeyed light leaking out around the edges of the door of the old steel stove. Min had already moved the front pews together and close to it, as they had done the previous nights, their shared blanket was neatly laid out, his pillow set to one side to make enough room for hers, and she gently tipped him over the pew back and let him down on his side. She leaned over him, to make sure he was okay. He wasn't speaking but he was breathing shallowly and steadily, and in the odd crib of the pews his body seemed even smaller than it was, loosed of stuffing, like some worn-out, sunken doll. He was staring up at her, not with wonderment or anger or even hurt but with the plainest appeal: Stay. Please don't go. She didn't know what she wished to do but >what else was there now? He was not her brother or her friend or someone to care for or love. He was all right now and she owed him nothing. And yet she let him take her hand. He gently tugged on her and she climbed over the pew back to lie beside him, and when he turned and rolled right onto her, his face pressed into her chest, his hands seeking the pits of her arms, she wanted to push him off. But there was something in his certain sorry weight that seemed to seep down into her, suffuse her, until a strange new fullness had risen up in the stripped caverns of her belly.
They fell asleep. After some time June awoke to a dying fire and climbed out of the pews to feed a small log into the stove. The fire flared quickly with new heat.
"Could I have some water, noo-nah?" Min said to her, peeking up over the pew back, his voice raspy.
She said all right. Outside, the sky was clear but moonless and the stars barely thwarted the darkness. But her eyes quickly adjusted and she made her way to the well. It was by the kitchen, and after she worked the hand pump five or six times the frigid water splashed out of the spout. Beneath there was a wooden ladle in a bucket, and while she filled its large cup she noticed a tiny, weak glow at the far end of the field. It was Min's kerosene lamp; they had left it by the gate. She went across the field to fetch it and was about to head back to the chap el when the low groan of a door broke the silence. June instinctively crouched down, thrusting the lamp behind her to shield its light. A dusky figure emerged from the Tanners' cottage. It was Hector. He must have gone over while she and Min were asleep. Hector turned and held out his hands toward the pitch-black doorway and then it was Sylvie, in her light-hued robe, stepping out gingerly on the stoop. He helped her down, her one leg unsteady, and though it was obviously painful for her she appeared to want to walk by herself, if closely braced by him. But as they made their way across the yard she tucked her face deeply into his neck, not so much with ardor but rather as if she were trying to blind herself, as if she were unwilling to see. They had not noticed her. June waited until they were long inside Hector's room before rising. The night air had grown even colder now but June did not feel its sharpness. She stood stiffly before his quarters, staring at the lamplight or stove light knifing out from a vertical gap near the bottom of the door. She had no picture in her mind of what might be going on inside, whether they were speaking or kissing or making love, but that was no matter now. She did not desire to see them or hear them as she had from the other side of the shared wall, for she did not want any image of their animate bodies, or the sounds of even chaste breathing, any signs of life.
June crept into the storeroom and took a can of kerosene. Outside she silently doused the wooden stoop, the walls, splashed the ground in front of his door. She raised high the wick of her lamp, the heightened brightness surging through the clear glass globe to illumine the whole side of the building and the night as though she were still in search of someone, still bearing the light of everlasting devotion. She lifted the lamp and was ready to hurl it against the door when a shadow inside interrupted the slat of light at the bottom. It was a moment's pause, a mere flicker, and yet it was enough to send a shudder through her bones.
She extinguished the lamp. She picked up the square-bottomed ladle from the ground. It was night again, and she suddenly felt the full chill of being alone. Inside the chapel, Min had pushed open the pews so that he was sitting directly in front of the fire, the door of the stove opened for light; he was looking at the book Sylvie had given her, fl ipping through the pages. When he realized June had returned he quickly put it down. He said, "You were taking so long."
"You can have it," she told him. "I don't care."
"I don't want it," he replied. "I don't want anything anymore."
"I brought you water."
She gave him the ladle and he drank half of it, saving her the rest. She took a sip and offered it back and he finished what was left. Then, with a surprising indifference, he threw the ladle into the stove. It was not worth ten grains of rice, but like many things in the orphanage it was a shared object and therefore of communal value, and the ease with which he tossed it in startled her. They watched it closely. The ladle was waterlogged and at first it only hissed but soon the twining and edges began to burn, smoke starting to billow from the bamboo cup, gathering beneath the long handle, and then in a whoosh it was aflame, its light hot on their faces. Min got up and left. When he returned he was carrying two of the small footlockers. One was his, the other June's--he had stolen into the girls' side. He opened the lid of his locker and began taking out the few items it contained, inspecting them for a moment and then tossing them into the stove. She did not say anything or try to stop him. He started with his box of pencils, and then a deck of Korean playing cards, and then he put in two special pairs of dress socks that he'd received from a church group in America. Next were some letters and greeting cards from the same people. Then he drew out the fine scarf he had made; aside from his everyday clothes, it was the last thing he had. He handed it to June to put in the fi re, and after he nodded to say it was all right, she balled it up and dropped it in. It burned not quickly but rather steadily and well, the fi re consuming it with its own slow savor.
"You want to try?" he said. "It feels good."
June opened her footlocker. One by one she began tossing in her possessions, which were nothing at all, letting Min throw in every other, a straw doll she had never played with and old magazines and a yellow summer dress that she had worn only once and knew now she would never wear again. The fi re fl ared with each item and they had to lean back from the blasts of heat. The last thing of June's was not in her footlocker but on the pew, beside Min, and he picked it up now, the little book. "How about this?"
She regarded it for a long moment. "Okay," she said.
"Are you sure?"
"Yes," she told him. "Put it in."
Min leaned in toward the stove, one hand shielding his face. He then flipped it into the seething vault. It lay on the coals, its cover pristine and cool blue. It appeared as though nothing would happen, that it was miraculously immune to their private inferno. And then she knew how wrong she was to give it up. She was wrong to ever let it go. There we
re things not bound for oblivion. But all at once the book was in flames, blazing as brightly as anything gone in so far, and without hesitation June reached deep into the stove and grabbed at the heart of the fire.
"Noo-nah!" Min gasped, trying to pull her back. "Noo-nah!"
There was pain at first, pain so sharp and great and pure that for a moment June felt that she had become the burning itself, that she was the crucible and not the iron, and as she grasped the book a lightning flashed into every last part of her. She fell back onto the fl oor, Min immediately snuffing her hand and the book with the blanket. He was frantic because she would not let it go, and when the flames were fi nally out he was crying at the sight of her hand and arm. The horrid, bubbled skin was like half-molten, bloody wax. But to June it belonged to someone else, for there was no feeling at all, the nerves seared dead up to her elbow. It was the untouched rest of her body that was shuddering, as if buffeted by the wake of all the phantom pain from her hand. Yet her mind was clear.
"Somebody must help us!" Min said, panicking. "I'll go get Mrs. Tanner!"
She told him no. He was frantic but she calmed him with an embrace. They were on their knees. She let him go and the boy sat on his haunches. She reached for the big oil lamp that she had fetched from outside. It was still quite heavy with fuel. She gave it to him and he hefted it from the bottom; he knew what she wanted him to do. He threw it into the stove, the glass globe shattering without much sound. June shut the hearth door, neither of them moving back. Min hugged her tight now. She was still holding the book, its cover charred but the inner pages still intact, and she could smell the smoke and her ruined skin as she wound her arm around his neck. She thought she heard voices outside but it was too late. She kissed him on the cheek.
"We don't need anyone," she said softly in his ear. "We're going to stay here now."
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