nascence.
Perturbation is an insidious foe, purposive breaths its perfidious accomplice, both unifying a prison amidst the idle bench. She’s bound — the thought cues a meager giggle, defused into a despondent hum — by an inexplicable helplessness: tradition’s dictation, defied by her own thoughts. It had been her idea to begin with, hadn’t it? “Why ... !? I don’t actually want to do this.” Her head tucked lowly, obfuscated by the browns of a multilayered coat, red scarf drawn around her in cheap masquerade.
“I don’t ... ! I actually do not.” Tiny mutter, arms crossing atop her chest. “I can’t. I have school.” An idea strikes like proverbial lightning. At her feet now, splayed hands beside her and narrating her tirade to the invisible and divisible pieces of her subconscious — talking to herself.
“I still have to complete this semester! I’ll just say that. What can he say? ‘Seok Areum, you are blacklisted’.” Voice deepened, hilariously, by her own impersonation. “Blacklisted for pursuing my education!?” She’s arguing herself ... “I don’t think so! I’ll be more reputable, if anything.” Breathe. “A sophisticated woman. Intelligent and with her own priorities. Smart. Very smart. A sophisticated woman who is intelligent, with her own priorities and very smart. Yes. Plus, if I get hit by a car or something ...” A nod spared for her personal validation, though her verdict was immediately decried.
“No, no! I can’t do that.” Head shake! Her footing pressing itself with certainty. “I don’t want to do that, either ... I want to do this. Beyond that, I need to do this.” There’s a great applause resounding throughout her mind. The public does not know that. “I have to. How bad can it be? He denies me, I leave. Life goes on. And I don’t care.” Yes! Another nod, lips ensouled by sudden confidence. “I don’t care, I don’t care, I don’t care, I don’t care. I do not care!”
Though she’s betrayed again, her heel turning as she chants (to herself, still) and presenting before her the familiar in question. She would’ve thought the situation more salvageable had her arms not swung as she twirled, pivoting through her feigned apathy and colliding with him. “ — Oh! I’m so sorry!” She thinks him a stranger initially, realizes his identity and dies inside.
“Oh!? It’s you. You’re here? I mean, you’re here. Of course. We arranged this spot and I was sitting here,” she sits promptly, “ — I was sitting here, waiting. And not not caring. Though, if I was, it was because of a phone call that I had gotten. In my pocket.” She draws the device into her hand, wiggling it with her fingers. “My phone in my pocket. Because I hung up. And went back to waiting.” Voice much smaller, smiling timidly with teeth. “Hi.”
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