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Daughters of the Dragon: A Comfort Woman's Story

Page 21

by William Andrews


  Today I wanted to get to work early. Gongson was expanding, along with the rest of South Korea and I had a lot of work to do. Before I left, I looked at the black and white photograph of my family sitting in a new frame on the table.

  I picked up the photo. “Ummah, Appa, Onni,” I said to the images as I did every morning before leaving for work, “thank you for sending your spirits to help me. I will always do my best to honor you.” I set the photo on the table. I left the beige, eight-story apartment building and headed to work.

  *

  I greeted Mrs. Min in the lobby of the new glass and steel, four-story Gongson building. “Good morning, Mrs. Min. "Isn’t it a lovely day?” As usual, she pretended not to notice me.

  When I got to my desk, Mr. Han, the senior attorney for Gongson, was already outside his office waiting for me. The gray-haired man wore his customary smooth blue suit and a worried look below his thick, gray hair. He held a stack of documents out to me and said we had to finish translating them today. “This is the most important deal our firm has ever done,” he said. “If we can get this loan at a favorable rate, we can expand into other industries and become a conglomerate, a true chaebol. Then you will see our company prosper!”

  “Yes sir,” I said with a respectful bow. I took the documents to my desk. “Are we doing them in English when we are done with the Japanese?”

  “No, we do not need them in English. We’re only dealing with the Japanese on this one. We want to keep the Americans out of it. Anyway,” he said slyly, “Diashi Bank is anxious to do business with us. Hopefully, they will give us a good rate.”

  “I will get them done today, sir,” I said.

  “Good,” Mr. Han said with a quick nod. “Oh, by the way, the bank’s negotiators will be here tomorrow morning. We need your help interpreting. You’re good at reading Japanese men.”

  Mr. Han went inside his office and closed the door while I sat at my desk and seethed. Yes, I knew all about the Japanese. They were ruthless and cruel and arrogant and bigoted. Even atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and a seven-year American occupation did not subdue their conceit. And now that Korea and Japan had normalized relations, Korean businesses were turning to the Japanese to help build their industries. Why are we doing business with these people? I fumed. Don’t you remember what they did to us? Don’t you know what they did to me?

  I closed my eyes and the images of the machine gun murdering the Korean girls in the comfort station courtyard burned in my mind. My stomach turned. I wanted to throw the contracts on the floor and storm out the door. I wanted to march into the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and tell them what the Japanese had done to me. I wanted to reach out to thousands of other women who I had heard the Japanese had also raped and tortured as ianfu.

  Then I remembered Soo-bo and the long hours she had to study to pass her exams. I remembered how I had promised my ancestors I would honor them. So, I went to work translating the contract. I took my time and consulted my dictionaries and made sure I got everything just right. In the margins, I made notes where the language was ambiguous and where Mr. Han should be careful.

  By mid-afternoon, I was done and gave the contract to Mr. Han. “Good work, Ja-hee,” he said. “Don’t forget, we need you to interpret tomorrow. Wear something the Japanese men will like. You know how they are.”

  ”Yes sir,” I said, taking care to hide my disgust as he disappeared into his office.

  The telephone on my desk rang and I answered it.

  “Ja-hee,” the caller said, “I want to see you after work. Can you meet me?” The caller was Choi Chul-sun, a senior manager at Gongson and I was sure he was in love with me. He was a friend of the founder’s son. We had been dating for nearly two years, going out to dinner and to the movies on the weekends. He was always painfully polite. Lately, he had been cautiously dropping hints about taking our relationship further.

  “Chul-sun, I can’t see you tonight. I have an important meeting tomorrow.”

  “Yes, I know about the meeting with Diashi Bank. But this is important, too.”

  “I also have to get home to Soo-bo.”

  “I will pay for a cab. You’ll be home at your usual time.”

  “Well, okay,” I said. “For just a little while. Where shall we meet?”

  He told me to meet him outside, at the corner in twenty minutes. I told him I would see him then, and hung up the phone. Over the next twenty minutes, I worked on a translation of a letter to an American subcontractor and put it in my ‘out’ basket. I put on my coat and headed to the lobby. On the way out, I passed the steno pool. Moon-kum, a thick, middle-aged woman looked up as I walked by. “Are you going to see Choi Chul-sun again tonight, Ja-hee?” she teased. “When are you going to marry him and make him a real man?”

  The other women looked from their typewriters and smiled. “He is not so handsome,” Moon-kum continued, “but he makes good money. He will be a vice president someday. What more do you want?” The other women covered their mouths and giggled.

  “Why do I need a man?” I said, throwing my head to the side. “I have everything I need. Men are nothing but a burden to a woman. And,” I whispered loudly, “they have bad odors.”

  The women laughed careful to cover their mouths. I smiled at them and took the stairs down to the lobby.

  When I got to the corner outside the building, Chul-sun was already waiting for me. As a senior manager in the accounting department, Choi Chul-sun was always well dressed but it didn’t help his looks. His expensive suit, white shirt, and red tie hung awkwardly on his boney frame. His skin was pocked and his thin hair was graying prematurely.

  He blushed as I approached. “Ja-hee,” he said. “Seeing you pleases me.” He motioned down the street. The sidewalk was crammed with people heading home. The November air was dry, but not too cold. Chul-sun took my arm. “I thought we could go to Namsan Park,” he said. “I will pay a cab to take you home. It’s not too cold for you, is it?”

  “No, I am comfortable.”

  We walked six blocks to Namsan Park. All around, the city was under construction. Office buildings and apartment buildings were springing up everywhere. Workers laid new streets. Cars motored about. Seoul was pulsing with growth.

  Chul-sun and I exchanged small talk as we walked. I could see he was nervous and I did my best to make him relax. It had been that way ever since we first went out two years before. That day, he picked me up in a cab and took me to an expensive new restaurant near the Han River. At first, he was terribly nervous and blushed a lot. But I used my skill at talking with men to put him at ease. Since then, we had gone out on dates nearly every weekend, and Chul-sun had become more comfortable around me. He told me that he was from a wealthy merchant family from Seoul and had gone to school for accounting after World War II. He had worked in procurement for the South Korean army during the Korean War and, for the past ten years, had worked for Gongson Construction. He was a proud, respected senior manager and had a bright future.

  I had told him about my family farm outside Sinuiju, how the Japanese had sent my father and sister away, and how my mother had died. I told him about Soo-bo’s father and how I had escaped to the South. I told him how I got my job with Gongson. But I never told him about the two years I had spent in Dongfeng, or that I worked for the communists, or about the year I had worked in the kijichon. I prayed that he would never find out.

  We entered the west end of Namsan Park. To the east, Mount Namsan rose gracefully in the low November sun. Young couples walked side by side over the gravel pathways. In an open field, an old man dressed in white, practiced taekkyeon with slow, graceful movements.

  An old man in a shabby coat sat hunched on a park bench. He extended his hand for spare change as we walked by. Chul-sun kicked gravel at him and scoffed. “Why do they let these people in the park?” he said.

  “He doesn’t have anywhere to go,” I replied.

  “It does not look good for Korea,” Chul-sun sai
d. “They should get rid of them.”

  We walked on. Eventually, Chul-sun let go of my arm. “Ja-hee,” he said, his lanky frame tipping forward, “um… how was work today?”

  “It was very busy. We reviewed the Diashi contracts.”

  “Good! Good,” Chul-sun said. “That is an important meeting tomorrow.” We started walking again.

  We walked in silence for a while longer. Finally, I said, “What is it, Chul-sun? You did not bring me here just for a walk.”

  “Yes, there is something. Something very important I want to ask you.”

  “I see,” I replied. “What is it?”

  Chul-sun drew his hand over his balding head and he blushed. He scanned the path in front of him as if the question he wanted to ask was lost among the gravel.

  I took his arm and turned him to face me. “Chul-sun, ask your question.”

  He shook his head. “I want to do this right like a proper Korean man should, but you have no father so I can’t ask him first, so I have to ask you directly, which is not the way it should be done, and now I cannot remember what I was going to say.”

  I gently touched his arm. “I understand. Just ask.”

  He gathered his courage and said, “Ja-hee, I would be honored if you would marry me. I will make a good husband.”

  I looked at Chul-sun and smiled to myself. I did not love him, not like I loved Jin-mo. But he was a good man and he wanted me very much. With him as my husband, I would have a good life in the new, prosperous South Korea. Soo-bo would have a family registration so she could go to high school. With luck, maybe she could even go to the university someday. Given my history, a man like Chul-sun was more than I could have ever expected.

  I lowered my eyes. “Yes, Chul-sun,” I said with a respectful bow. “I will be honored to be your wife.”

  T HIRTY-SEVEN

  The next morning, I put on the dress that best showed off my slender legs. I applied more makeup than usual and carefully brushed my hair, flicking my wrist with the brush to make it curl at the end. I looked at my reflection in the mirror. At thirty-four, I was still able to turn men’s heads. But I was disgusted to have to put on such a display for the Japanese men. They made my stomach turn.

  I walked out of my apartment along with Soo-bo. We said goodbye at the street and I watched my daughter march off to school. I pulled my coat tight against the November chill and headed for my bus. As I walked, I pushed aside my anger about dealing with the Japanese. After all, for the first time in my life, my future looked good. The night before, I had agreed to marry Chul-sun.

  A block from the bus stop was a dress shop. I stopped at the window and peered in. In the back were colorful wedding hanboks with long chima skirts and jeogori blouses. I spotted a red one. I always looked good in red. Off to the side were intricate ceremonial headdresses and wedding sashes with brightly embroidered flowers. I pressed against the window to get a better look. My heart beat a little faster as I tried to picture myself dressed in the red hanbok holding the arm of a proud Chul-sun in front of his family and our friends from Gongson. I smiled as I imagined an excited Soo-bo, wearing the blue hanbok, and the young men at the wedding staring at her when they thought no one was looking.

  I heard the bus to Itaewon pull up a quarter of a block away. I ran and caught it as it started to pull out. I thanked the driver for stopping for me and then took a seat near the back. When I settled in my seat, I quietly laughed at myself for almost missing my bus to look at wedding dresses.

  As the bus wound its way through the Yongdungp’o-gu district and crossed yet another new bridge over the Han River into Itaewon, I prepared myself for the meeting ahead. It was always difficult working meetings with the Japanese. They used word tricks and deception to gain an edge. Even though Mr. Han and the executives of Gongson spoke Japanese, they depended on me to read their counterpart’s body language and catch the nuances of what they were saying. I was good at it, and today, I was determined not to let the Japanese get away with anything.

  *

  The Gongson Construction Company had designed their fourth floor conference room to impress people. It had mahogany paneling, red carpeting and a western-style table that sat twelve people with enough room to spread papers around. I stood in the corner while the company’s executives took their places at the table. Mr. Han caught my eye and gave me a firm look to remind me how important this meeting was. I bowed my head to indicate I understood.

  Three Japanese executives from Diashi Bank entered the room. I kept my eyes respectfully low as the executives greeted each other and exchanged business cards in a grand show of respect. I carefully examined the shoes of the Japanese bankers. One wore shoes that were coming untied and I knew he would be sloppy in his negotiations. Another had shoes that were smudged and unpolished and I knew that what he said would be inconsequential. The third wore shoes that were perfectly polished and tied tight. He would be the one to watch out for.

  The executives took their places at the table. I stood behind them, keeping my eyes on the red carpeting. The meeting began with a short speech in Japanese from the president of Gongson, about how honored they were to have an opportunity to do business with a firm as respected as Diashi Bank. I cringed when he said Korea was lucky to have such good friends as the Japanese, but I pushed my disgust aside.

  Next, the Japanese executive with the smudged shoes stood to introduce their head negotiator. I smiled to myself at their grandstanding. While Gongson’s president merely gave a speech, the Japanese had to introduce the head of their team. I had to admit, they knew how to take the upper hand.

  I stepped forward, ready to interpret. “Gentlemen,” the junior executive said bombastically, “you are very fortunate to have one of Diashi Bank’s top executives to meet with you today. Normally, he would not get involved in a transaction this small. However, since you are a new customer, he has graciously agreed to be here. He is a man of great intellect and importance. I am pleased to introduce to you, Diashi Bank’s Senior Vice President, Mr. Tanaka.”

  Every nerve in my body snapped to life. Had I heard the man correctly? Had he said, Tanaka? I slowly raised my eyes and watched as the executive stood to make his speech. When I saw him, my heart stopped. He had filled out in the past twenty years and his hair was gray and thinning. But he still had the pointed nose, the cold sharp eyes and the air of authority. It was my Kempei, Lieutenant Tanaka. I could almost see him slapping his black boots with his shinai.

  I stood in the Gongson conference room with my eyes low and began to tremble. My breathing was difficult and the walls closed in. My legs ached where he had beaten me that last week in Dongfeng. I squeezed my eyes closed and forced myself to take a deep breath.

  At the head of the table, Lieutenant Tanaka paced back and forth while he delivered his speech in his clipped tone, just has he had done in front of the Korean girls in Dongfeng. Only a few words of his speech registered with me; “You are fortunate… discipline… obey.” The kempei’s words swept me back to the comfort station. I could picture the terror in Jin-sook’s eyes when he tied her to the post that first day. I could hear the girls’ sobs as they lay in their tiny rooms at night. I could see Soo-hee’s ashen face as she lay dying on the infirmary floor. And there, standing in the opulent Gongson conference room, I was a comfort woman again.

  I took another glance at the kempei strutting and posturing in front of his audience and another fear gripped me. I had never told anyone except Jin-mo about my two years in the comfort station. Lieutenant Tanaka could reveal my terrible secret or use it as an advantage in these negotiations. But I had been just a girl in Dongfeng and now I was a mature woman. Perhaps he wouldn’t recognize me. I struggled to keep my composure and kept my head bowed low.

  Lieutenant Tanaka finished his speech and took his seat. I moved to a place out of his line of sight and the negotiations began. The Japanese carefully answered questions about the loan contract and they themselves asked pointed questions about how we w
ould use and repay the money. Several times, Mr. Han asked me to clarify what the Japanese meant in a phrase or statement. Each time, as I stepped forward and answered, I glanced at the kempei. He never looked at me.

  The meeting progressed, each side angling for an advantage and gaining none. After two hours, both sides agreed to the final contract language. They decided to reconvene later that evening to celebrate with drinks and dinner at Seoul’s most expensive restaurant. As they rose and bowed to each other, Mr. Han, standing next to Lieutenant Tanaka, motioned for me to come to them. I approached with my head lowered. Lieutenant Tanaka was talking to the president of Gongson with his chin raised and chest out, as he did to the girls in Dongfeng.

  “Yes, sir?” I said softly.

  “I want to be sure we are clear on the maturity dates. Please look them over in both languages. That will be all, Ja-hee.”

  I froze. Mr. Han had said my name aloud. I glanced at Lieutenant Tanaka and our eyes met for a split second. He showed a flash of recognition. I quickly went to my place behind the executives. Soon, all the men left leaving me alone in the mahogany-paneled conference room.

  I took a seat at the table to collect myself. I was sure Lieutenant Tanaka had recognized me. It was in his eyes. For just a flash, a look of surprise replaced his cold arrogance. And… what else did I see? Was it fear? Could it be that he, too, didn’t want anyone to know what had happened in Dongfeng twenty years earlier?

  I quickly gathered my papers. As I was about to leave, the conference room door opened and Lieutenant Tanaka stepped in. He closed the door behind him. I lowered my eyes as he took a seat at the table and stretched his legs out in front of him.

 

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