The Empty Shop

944 Words
Chapter 1 – The Empty Shop The smell of starch and steamed silk still clung to the walls of the shop, stubborn the way grief was stubborn, refusing to be aired out even when all the windows were flung wide open. Han Ji-eun stood in the doorway for a long time before she could bring herself to step inside, the bell over the door chiming once, twice, in a thin, uncertain voice that felt too loud in the hollowed room. Her mom used to say that every shop had a soul, that if you left it closed too long it would start to forget the people who loved it. Ji-eun had laughed then, rolling her eyes while threading a needle, but now the words are stuck in her chest like something alive and painful. The shop had been closed for twelve days — the longest stretch since she had been born — and she wondered if it remembered her at all. Dust had settled on the long worktable, turning the dark walnut gray. The spools of thread sat like soldiers abandoned after a war: jade green, sunset orange, imperial red, a hundred colors that had once meant joy, celebration, weddings, birthdays, the gentle happiness of people beginning something new. Now they just meant unpaid rent, hospital bills, a funeral she could barely remember because she had been too numb to notice the details. Ji-eun shut the door behind her and rested her forehead against the wood, breathing in. It still smelled like her mother — a mix of lavender soap and fabric glue, with a hint of coffee that never quite went away. Her chest tightened. For a terrifying second, she thought she might collapse right there on the spot, her knees folding like the flimsy chairs customers used to sit on during fittings. Don’t breakdown here, she told herself. Not in the shop. Not yet. She pushed away from the door and began the ritual she had performed a thousand times before. She flicked on the light switch. The fluorescent bulbs flickered, buzzing like trapped insects, then settled into a steady glow. She rolled up the metal shutter halfway so that morning light could slip in and paint the bolts of silk in pale gold. Only when everything was done did she allow herself to look around. The mirror in the fitting corner was streaked with fingerprints from the last client her mother had seen — a bride, Ji-eun remembered, who had come in a week before the collapse, tears in her eyes because she thought the sleeves were too long. Her mother had laughed, had lifted the girl’s chin gently and said, “A bride who cries before her wedding will laugh the loudest after.” Ji-eun had stood in the doorway then, pretending not to watch, pretending not to memorize the curve of her mother’s smile. Now the mirror reflected only emptiness. Ji-eun walked to the table and ran her fingers over the dust, tracing invisible lines. The silence was too big. She reached for the radio without thinking, turning the knob until soft trot music filled the air. It was old-fashioned, the kind her mother liked, but it made the room feel less like a tomb. She picked up the ledger from beneath the counter. It was heavier than it had any right to be — a thick, red-bound book filled with neat handwriting and tiny calculations. Ji-eun opened it to the last page, where the numbers turned from black to a bruised, alarming red. She didn’t need to read them. She knew them by heart. ₩87,430,000. That was what the shop owed after the hospital bills, after the medicine that never worked, after the night her mother had finally stopped breathing in a room that smelled nothing like silk or lavender. The shop didn’t just belong to her. It owned her. The bell jingled again, startling her so badly that the ledger slipped from her hands and hit the floor with a dull thud. Her heart hammered as she turned, expecting a customer, a miracle, someone who didn’t know the difference between hope and habit. Instead, a man in a cheap gray suit stood in the doorway, holding a clipboard like a weapon. “Han Ji-eun?” he asked. Her mouth went dry. “Yes.” He glanced at the shop — the bolts of cloth, the empty stools, the radio murmuring in the corner — and his expression softened in a way that didn’t help at all. “I’m from Mirae Bank,” he said. “About your mother’s account.” There it was. The thing she had been waiting for, dreading, pretending wouldn’t come if she just didn’t look at it too closely. He handed her an envelope. Thick. Official. Her name printed too neatly on the front. “I’m sorry,” he added, almost sincerely. “You have sixty days.” The words swam in her head. Sixty days to do what? To invent money? To resurrect the dead? To stop the walls from remembering that her mother was gone? She took the envelope with shaking hands. The man bowed, uncomfortable, then left. The bell chimed again, brighter now, because the door was open wider. Ji-eun stood frozen in the center of the shop, the envelope burning in her hands like something alive. She didn’t open it. She didn’t need to. Sixty days. That was how long the shop had left. That was how long she had left to prove that grief could be stitched into something survivable. She slid down into her mom's old chair and finally, quietly, let herself break down and cry.
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