Chapter 3
Kwon Ha stepped out of the car and took a slow look around the village.
The fields stretched endlessly, green with young barley swaying in the wind like ripples on water.
Beyond them lay the vast paddies, busy with farmers preparing for rice planting.
Between the dikes, small slate-roofed houses jutted up at even intervals.
And further out â an orchard blanketed in white blossoms.
Pear flowers. In full bloom.
Tranquil. Quiet. Almost unnervingly so.
âWhat a goddamn countryside.â
He muttered it under his breath, though no one asked for his opinion.
Everything here stood in stark contrast to the rush of the city where heâd come from â no traffic, no neon, no noise.
To someone like him, who thrived on motion and control, this was dead air.
<Welcome to Yehwari>
The wooden sign stood proudly beside a towering statue of General Jihae, guardian of the village.
Kwon Haâs brows tightened.
Yehwari.
That damned Yehwari.
âIhwado-ga is eight hundred meters ahead, sir,â
said Secretary Shin, approaching like a human navigation system that didnât know when to stop.
Kwon Ha turned his head.
Shin, clearly enamored by the rustic landscape, stretched his arms and breathed in the fresh country air like a man on vacation.
A faint smile even touched his lips â a mistake he realized too late.
Because when his gaze finally met the cold, razor-edged eyes of his boss, his face went pale.
He straightened instantly, bowing stiffly.
âM-my apologies, sir.â
âNo need. Why apologize?â
Kwon Ha smiled â that calm, pleasant smile of his.
But Shin knew that smile. Everyone who worked under Kwon Ha did.
That was the storm warning.
âIf Iâm miserable,â Kwon Ha said lightly,
âthen someone else ought to enjoy themselves, donât you think?â
He pulled out a long cigarette, placed it between his lips.
Shin rushed to light it, retreating the moment the flame caught.
Now his posture was rigid again, shoulders drawn tight.
Kwon Ha gave his shoulder a few casual pats â not comfort, just control â and exhaled smoke through half-lidded eyes.
âWhere are my aunt and uncle?â
âTheyâve already visited, sir.â
Of course they had.
It was the perfect opportunity to bite off a chunk of Daesung while the Chairman wasnât looking.
He inhaled deeply. The tip of the cigarette glowed red, his cheek hollowing with the pull.
Those two never knew moderation anyway.
âI heard they tried to pressure the Ihwado people,â Shin continued carefully.
âThreats, bribes, everything. Three days straight. The Chairman found out and⊠reprimanded them harshly. Said theyâre not to step foot here again.â
Kwon Ha chuckled, low and sharp.
âHow precise of them. Almost admirable, really.â
The irony was enough to make him laugh.
And to think people like that ran a business at all. Oh, right â they didnât. They just consumed it.
He pressed a finger to his temple, rubbing slowly.
âSo the locals are on edge.â
âVery much so, sir. Especially since theyâre brewing the Celestial Pear Blossom Wine this season.â
âHmmâŠâ
He fell silent, the crease between his brows deepening.
Even on the road here, through the shock and the bitterness, his mind had kept working â calculating, arranging, adapting.
Plan B had been set the moment he heard the old manâs conditions.
Plan C heâd refined on the drive up.
Heâd always told his staff â In despair, find structure.
He wasnât just anyone.
He was Kang Kwon Ha, Marketing Director of Daesung Judo â Koreaâs pride in traditional liquor.
No obstacle could possibly break him.
His gaze sharpened.
If you want to catch a tigerâŠ
âLetâs take a walk around the village first.â
âŠyou start by circling its den.
The Inner Garden
When Eun-ja emerged from the Inner Garden, she looked utterly spent.
She had locked herself inside for several days, crafting five hundred bottlesâ worth of Cheondo Ihwaju.
What had once been effortless was now a struggle.
Without her cane, even walking had become difficult.
How much longer can I hide it?
Her sigh carried both fatigue and the sour scent of fermented grain.
âGrandmother, are you all right?â
Do-ah came running, the hem of her reform hanbok fluttering behind her.
Eun-ja looked at her â at the girl she had raised from a crying infant found at the village gate into the poised young woman before her.
The years had left their marks on Eun-jaâs hands â lines of labor, veins like riverbeds.
But her heart ached most when she thought of her granddaughterâs beginnings.
Twice abandoned â first by her parents, then by Eun-jaâs own daughter.
At first, that daughter and her husband had taken the child in, claiming they would raise her as their own, driven by the despair of infertility.
For two years, it seemed to work. The baby smiled. The house felt full.
Until the miracle pregnancy.
When the ârealâ daughter was born, everything changed.
âYouâre not my child.â
âYou were adopted. Go away!â
âDonât even dream of being heir. Thatâs for my daughter.â
Eun-jaâs jaw tightened at the memory.
In the end, she had forced them out â kept Do-ah, and cut ties.
Now that same girl stood before her, steady and solemn.
âGrandmother, you donât look well.â
Yes, even the girlâs tone had become hers â measured, restrained, cold.
A mirror image molded by circumstance.
Itâs time, Eun-ja thought. Time to pass it down.
She had never once considered her vain daughter or her younger granddaughter for succession.
They wouldnât understand the weight of it â the craft, the legacy.
They came from Seoul talking about âturning Ihwado into a winery.â Nonsense.
âDo-ah, go to the jar storage. Bring me twenty mid-sized bottles for the Ihwaju. Can you handle it alone?â
âYes, grandmother.â
âAnd stop by the Bangsâ place. They should have the item I asked for.â
The Bang family had made earthen jars for Ihwado for twenty-one generations â true artisans of clay.
Do-ah nodded, though she didnât move to leave.
âWell? What are you waiting for?â
âJust⊠Iâll walk you to the veranda.â
âGo on.â
Her pale hand waved her off â firm, final.
Do-ah hesitated, lips pressed tight, eyes uncertain.
The old womanâs cane struck the floor softly as she turned away.
âWhen youâre done, come straight to the Inner Garden,â Eun-ja said without looking back.
âWeâll start steaming the gumu-tteok tomorrow. Be ready.â
Do-ah froze.
Gumu-tteok.
Rice cakes used as the base ingredient for Cheondo Ihwaju.
It was the foundation of the liquor â something only the master of Ihwado ever prepared.
By mentioning it, Eun-ja was saying:
You will be my successor.
âGrandmotherâŠâ
Tears welled up in Do-ahâs wide eyes â unrefined, unhidden emotion trembling on the edge of spilling.
Even though people whispered it for years, she had never dared to believe it.
That she, an adopted child, would be chosen over the bloodline.
She wiped her tears quickly, forcing her expression back to stillness.
âIâll do my best. I promise.â
She hurried out, wheeling out her old bicycle from the shed.
Clack, clack. The pedals turned, faster and faster, as she sped through the pear-blossom road.
The air was sweet, heavy with pollen.
Her heart pounded.
She had to finish her errand before dusk.
Then â
A shadow darted between the pear trees.
âAhâ! Watch out!â
The front wheel swerved.
Crash.
She hit the ground, pain shooting up her leg as her palms scraped the dirt.
Her thin hanbok couldnât protect her.
Her bicycle clattered to the side, and someoneâs smartphone skidded across the ground beside her.
Who was that?
She blinked hard, vision blurred by dust and sunlight.
A beam of gold slipped between the clouds, catching on falling petals.
The pear blossoms shimmered â blindingly bright.
When her eyes adjusted, she finally saw him.
A man â
A man whose sharply defined features seemed foreign to this village.
His suit was immaculate, his posture commanding.
Something in his presence â polished, distant, out of place â made her heart stumble in a different way than the fall had.
And thus began the first meeting of Do-ah and Kwon Ha.