Eight. Eight times.
That's how many times you've returned to the house since you found out how Yeonjun died, each time riddled with anxiety about having to face him and pretending like you don't know the truth. Like you don't have the answer that he's been searching for all of these years.
But each time, he failed to appear. You finished cleaning the attic with no company, and it ended up being a much lengthier process than you originally assumed—mostly because you found your father's birth certificate shoved into a random folder with pages and pages of expired coupons, and you nearly threw the entire thing away without realizing, which resulted in you feeling the need to go through all of the trash again, just to make sure.
Naturally, there were no other important documents in the trash that you'd already collected—and it ended up being a massive waste of your time. But it sent a wave of relief through your tired body, letting you know that nothing important had gotten tossed by accident.
After clearing out the attic, you thought that Yeonjun might come back—if not to talk to you and be your friend, then perhaps to see the progress on the house he inhabits? Yet, nothing happened. Nothing as you finished sweeping the floors, nothing as you moved the last few boxes out of the attic and either into your car or the garbage, and nothing when you stand by the front door for a moment, your hand hesitating before opening it and leaving—hoping that he would come to say goodbye.
It wasn't the end—you still had your own bedroom to clean out. It was what you'd been dreading; both because it was a cesspool of bad memories in your own life, and also because of what you found out about Yeonjun's past, and what had happened to him in that room specifically. It still sent a chill down your spine to think about the room, which was painted with dark red and other dark stains—a horrifying reminder of the crime that was committed there. You try your hardest to recall if you ever saw any stains or any signs of the disturbing event, but your mind comes up blank.
You know that the only solution, the only way to ease your mind, is to go back to the house and finally finish what you started. Just as it were so back in July, after you were plagued with nightmares upon your first visit back home, after so many years.
On a crisp autumn day in mid October, you return to the house, knowing that this would be one of, if not the last time. Just before you drove over, you'd been chewing your nails nervously as you spoke to Taehyun over the phone—you needed some last minute encouragement.
"Summer's over, you know. What about that job offer again?" Taehyun asks, his voice muffled over the phone—he was driving to work, and on the way he passed under a tunnel which always made his service choppy.
"I got an extension, until the end of the year. They actually came to me about it, because they're having a fresh start at the company come the new year," you explain, as you pack up your cleaning supplies, preparing to head over to the house. "They said a lot of applicants dropped because of the sudden change in timeframe, but it worked out perfectly for me. Now I have until November to wrap everything up."
"Not December?"
"Well, my lease for my new apartment in the city starts in December..." you trail off, realizing this leaves you with the rest of October and November, to finish cleaning, take photos, and actually put the house up for sale. The cleaning was just the first step—and you were lagging.
"... Right."
You could hear the doubt in Taehyun's voice, so clear that it made you squirm with shame. He was probably thinking that you should have hired someone—probably someone like god damn Seo Changbin—to just do the dirty work for you, instead of making yourself suffer through it.
YOU ARE READING
the debt of existence | choi yeonjun
Fanfictionyou remember your childhood home as a landmine, filled with metaphoric bombs just waiting to go off at any possible second-there was a reason you never came back home to visit after you moved out at the ripe age of eighteen. years later, your parent...