Chapter 05
No matter where the client got hold of Shin Saimdang paper,
just looking at this sheet was enough to see it was counterfeit currency with a clear intent to circulate.
âThere donât seem to be any traces of special solutions used during counterfeiting.â
I slowly scanned the surroundings.
Other than some paint stains on the moldy walls, nothing stood out.
Well, itâs understandableâthe client probably thought it was too risky to entrust something like this to Mr. Sim Oh-han, who had just gotten acquainted.
Seeing that thereâs no workshop for post-processing,
âLooks like Mr. Sim isnât part of the team.â
Modern criminal activity is marked by specialization and division of labor.
A prime example is real estate, stocks, and currency counterfeiting.
In counterfeiting, there are those who sketch the designs, those who print, those who supply the paper, those who sell, and so on.
For their own safety, escape routes always existâbut here, there was none.
âIf anything, the only way out would be that windowâŠ.â
But even if Sim Oh-han folded his tall frame in half, itâd be impossible to squeeze through that tiny window.
With only one door, he clearly wasnât part of the team.
âThis looks like the studio of a guy who only paints pictures. He probably got tricked into this with a commission.â
Maybe from the start, the client wanted to use Simâs drawingsâdone in a style similar to real currencyâas the base for making 3D plates.
If thatâs the caseâŠ
Once the counterfeit money got caught in circulation, they could pin it all on Sim, then force him into the team with no choice but to obey.
After all, there are plenty of currencies worth counterfeitingâdollars, euros, yen.
âGuess you could say heâs lucky to have been caught early⊠or maybe unlucky.â
A dry laugh escaped me.
âAnyway, I wonder if using psychometry on this paper would reveal its past.â
Letâs give it a try.
âHup!â
Since Iâd already been paid, I thought maybe I could find something useful for Sim by focusing hard on the paper.
Bzzzt.
âCan you do won as well?
Snap.
The vision of two men surrounding Sim and talking to him ended in an instant.
[Your psychometry experience has increased.]
âAt least I saw a second longer than last time. Guess the experience really does pile up.â
It was a shame I couldnât check my actual psychometry experience points.
I set the paper down on the easel, then rifled through the shelves and cabinets for any evidence.
Old oil paints, canvases, brushes.
Books on Western art history and catalogues of famous artists. Andâan A4-sized black notebook!
Got it.
âA real artist should have one of these.â
I pulled out the thick sketchbook and flipped through it.
âHere it says âDollar studiesâ but the page is left blank. He even scored the paper to slip in a sheetâguess he hasnât drawn it yet.â
A few pages later, the face of the late Queen Elizabeth II appeared, aging with each turn.
âIncredible. He not only captures texture, surface, and lighting, but also knows exactly what parts to exaggerate for effect.â
Now I understood why the client asked Sim to draw banknotes.
Art that looked more like a photo than a photo itself.
ââŠItâs just copying, copying.â
Simâs artistic style was hyperrealism.
Born in late 1960s America, hyperrealism often expressed the vulgarity of consumerism, extreme suffering, and the poverty of the working class.
Even now, itâs used to convey diverse themes in diverse ways.
âMany hyperrealist painters project images onto canvas with beam projectors or studio lights, but seeing none here, he must just set the image next to him and draw by sight.â
Not grid method, not airbrushâjust pure observation.
I turned my head toward the whiteboard on the wall.
âExhibition at Insadong Suryun Gallery completed, Jan 20 for 10 days.â
A star marking a commissioned work.
The clientâs deadline for a 50,000-won note was July 10.
The piece shown at Suryun Gallery was titled The Art of Moneyâa work plastered with dollars, euros, and won across a vacant face.
No sign of new work after that.
Hmm.
âSo he spent six months working on a commission, all for a tiny sheet of paper? Impressive.â
Judging by how The Art of Money had every background detail painstakingly captured, it made sense.
âBut even just from the whiteboard, isnât it obvious the client contacted him after seeing that exhibition?â
Why was that fact omitted from the first trial? They said they searched the studio, too.
Wait a minute.
âThis was an initiated case, wasnât it?â
An initiated case means investigators (police or prosecutors) take up a case themselves based on reports or intelligence.
So it wasnât mere negligence by the prosecutorâŠ
âThey hid the fact on purpose? If this was all orchestrated, then it makes sense.â
A rotten reality, but some things never change.
Traditionally, the crown jewel of the prosecutorâs office is the so-called Intelligence Division, home to the special investigations team.
Usually, a prosecutor who proves themselves in the criminal division gets promoted to intelligence.
To grab that chance, they build up a track record.
If they canât show results, they miss out on promotionsâso they resort to orchestrated investigations.
âAnd yeah, August is just when they check if youâve racked up results. From a prosecutorâs point of view, if thereâs no new evidence, the appeal court just dismisses it.â
Chances were high that Simâs case was one of those orchestrated investigations.
âNo wonder the on-site evidence collection was so sloppy.â
In criminal trials, the prosecutor has to prove the crime. But since Sim couldâve been acquitted, they deliberately omitted evidence.
All for their own career record.
âOnce we leave here, Iâll need to confirm how Sim and the client first met. That wasnât contested in the first trial, so itâs grounds for appeal.â
Just as I resolved to use psychometry on the whole roomâ
BANG BANG BANG
The steel door rattled violently, then swung open.
âHey, you done yet?â
âNo, not yet.â
ââŠWhatâs there to even look at.â
There was nothing worth taking, but maybe Sim felt uneasy letting me stay alone in the studio, so he kept grumbling.
He stepped inside.
Doesnât matter if I tell him to stay out, he never listens.
I crossed my arms, tilted my head toward the whiteboard.
âDid the client contact you after seeing your work at Suryun Gallery?â
ââŠYeah, sort of.â
âPlease be precise. This is important.â
Simâs annoyed expression shifted to seriousness.
âThey said they saw my work at Suryun, picked up my business card from beside the pamphlets, and contacted me.â
âThen why was this motive left out of the first trial? Didnât you say this during questioning?â
Sim clenched his fist, seething.
âI did! But the prosecutor mocked me, saying it wasnât important, and told me to quit making excuses.â
âReally? Did you happen to record that?â
ââŠI donât think so.â
Strange.
Even if it was orchestrated, interrogation sessions nowadays are recorded.
âSo, after reading the written statement, did you deny what was written? You were questioned for over eight hours, right?â
âYeah, I told them multiple times, but they just ignored me.â
âAnd after the statement was written, didnât they make you seal it with your fingerprint?â
âThey forced me. When I refused, they smacked me in the back of the head.â
ââŠâŠ!â
That prosecutorâs completely out of his mind.
Recalling the memory, Sim grew more agitated.
âI thought it was hopeless, so during the first trial I told the judge myselfââThe client saw my work at Suryun, contacted me, and we met in my studio for the commission.ââ
A retraction of testimony!
âAnd when you said that, did you also mention the prosecutor hit you?â
âNo. Why would I? Thatâd make me look weak.â
Sigh. Pride is not what you need here.
The judge must have doubted the written statementâs credibility after Simâs sudden reversal.
If the judge had asked Suryun Gallery for CCTV footage, they wouldâve seen the truth right away. Did they just trust the prosecutor instead?
Things were getting messy.
I looked at Sim, who sighed heavily.
âWeâll have to get a copy of the CCTV from Suryun Gallery.â
âI tried, but the director refused.â
âEven when you said it was for court evidence?â
âYeah.â
Well, unless police or prosecutors request it for investigation, the gallery has no reason to give it to a private individual.
Except in urgent cases of life, safety, or property at risk.
From the galleryâs perspective, this case could tarnish their image.
So how do I get the CCTV copyâŠ
My eyes landed on a poster for the Seoul New Artists Exhibition taped to the studio door.
An idea struck.
âAh!â
ââŠLawyer?â
âJust thinking.â
âYeah, sure you were.â
Is he mocking me?
Whatever my client thinks, I just have to do my job.
I walked straight to the living room.
âIâll take care of the CCTV.â
âYou will?â
âYes. Is there a problem with that?â
Sim studied me closely, uncertain.
âYouâre⊠different from the other lawyers Iâve met. Hm. Is this what capitalism tastes like?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âEh, nothing.â
I got it.
Heâs probably never seen a lawyer go collect evidence themselves. Most just sit in their office with documents.
Time constraints force thatâme included.
Anyway.
âThere are good pros worth their pay, and useless hacks who arenât.â
âNo, I meanââ
I cut him off. His reply wasnât important.
âBy the way, do you have the prosecutorâs list of submitted evidence?â
âE-Evidence list?â
âYes. Iâd rather not waste time waiting for access to the case files. Donât you have it?â
âWait a sec. I grabbed everything I could back then.â
Sim dragged over a big basket from the corner of the living room and pulled out an old laptop.
âSince I donât have a cabinet here, I just dumped all my stuff in this basket.â
âThatâs fine.â
âAhem, I think I saved copies of the documents on my phone before destroying the papers. Just a minute.â
âTake your time. Iâll head back into the studio to search for anything else usable as evidence.â
âO-Okay!â
While Sim powered on the laptop, I planned to use psychometry on the studio itself.
But the moment I stepped inside, the system window popped up.
âŠAre you kidding me?