The Whispering Pages #4

Months flew by and years passed. Seojun was now 12, Yoon 11, and the blossom treehouse—a skeletal structure wedged between the branches of a cherry tree older than the feud itself—had become their clandestine refuge. Every spring, the tree erupted in pink, petals drifting like secrets onto the rusted tin roof. Today, they’d snuck out at dawn, their families none the wiser.

“They’ll skin us alive if they find out we’re here,” Seojun muttered, tossing his backpack onto the floor. The Kang vs. Lee graffiti glared back at him, freshly repainted by some cousin’s vengeful hand.

Yoon shrugged, already prying at a loose board. “They’ll never look here. They think this place is cursed.”

And it was. The treehouse had been built decades earlier by a Kang boy and a Lee girl—star-crossed lovers whose bones now lay somewhere in the ravine below, their names erased from family records. Seojun’s grandmother had warned him never to go near it. Bad luck clings to the wood, she’d said. But bad luck was all either of them had ever known.

Yoon’s fingers slipped into a gap beneath the floor. “There’s something—” He yanked, and the board splintered upward. A lacquered box, blackened by age and damp, lay nestled in the dirt.

Seojun crouched beside him. “Open it.”

Inside, wrapped in moth-eaten silk, was a journal. The cover bore two names: Min-ji and Jae-hyun. Seojun’s stomach lurched. Min-ji—his grandmother, who’d died young, whose portrait hung in the Kang ancestral hall with eyes that seemed to follow him. Yoon went pale. “Jae-hyun… that’s my grandfather. The one my dad says abandoned us.”

They read by the dim light filtering through the blossoms.

June 12, 1953

Jae-hyun brought me a sprig of edelweiss tonight. “Like your laugh,” he said. Our fathers would kill him for that alone. But the war’s over, and still the hate festers. He wants to run. To take the river path north. I said yes. Let them call us traitors. Let the world burn if it means we burn together.

Yoon’s breath caught. “They were… like us.”

Seojun stiffened. “Like us?”

Yoon gestured to the journal, then to the narrow space between them—close enough that their knees brushed. “Meeting in secret. Hiding.”

Seojun flipped the page, avoiding Yoon’s gaze. A pressed edelweiss fluttered out, its petals paper-thin. The next entry was scribbled in haste:

September 1, 1953

They’ve locked me in the attic. Jae-hyun’s gone—the Lees say he fled, but I know he wouldn’t. Not without me. I hear his voice in the wind. I see his face in the stars. They’ll have to kill me to make me forget.

The final entry, dated October 3, 1953, was a single sentence: Find us where the willow weeps.

Outside, wind shook the cherry tree. Petals fell like snow. Yoon traced the words, his voice soft. “They never stopped loving each other.”

Seojun’s throat tightened. He’d spent years hating the Lees, rehearsing the slights his family had endured. But Yoon’s laughter in this rotting treehouse, the way he’d once split his last rice cake with Seojun during a storm… none of it fit the story he’d been told.

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