Chapter 673
“I don’t see you in the drama these days. Did you get fired?” A cla.s.smate sitting next to him asked.
They had switched seats ever since the second semester started, and Maru got someone he had never talked to as his neighbor.
“I guess my appearances did decrease. I wasn’t fired. You know how the story is all about the love relations.h.i.+ps of the main characters, right? Just that takes up all the time.”
“That sounds unfortunate.”
“I guess, I do get paid by the episode.”
“You don’t get a contract fee or something? Like in the tens of millions.”
“Those that sign a contract are the amazing people. In my case, I’m similar to a part timer. I get paid according to how many times I show up on TV.”
“Is your face all that needs to appear? Then do you still get paid if you don’t shoot but still show up in the episode?”
“If I don’t partic.i.p.ate in the shoot, but my face shows up through someone’s memories or through a photo, I do get paid, though, not as much as shooting a full episode.”
“That sounds good, but it’d be better to get proper treatment by raising your value, right?”
“Obviously.”
His cla.s.smate nodded. Maru remembered this guy as one of the quiet kids in cla.s.s, but it seemed that he was no different from a chatterbox. Did he not know because they weren’t close?
“Uhm, can I ask, is it hard to become an actor?”
For the first time, his cla.s.smate asked after a bit of hesitation. He looked rather embarra.s.sed.
“Why? You wanna become a celebrity too?”
“No! I hate standing in front of people. I don’t have the confidence either.”
Wait - his cla.s.smate added before taking out his phone and showing him a photo. There was a girl who looked to be in elementary school. His cla.s.smate was in the photo as well, and the girl was smiling brightly while grabbing onto his pants.
“Who?”
“My sister.”
“You two look like you are far apart in age.”
“She’s ten. She’s a late child. She’s really energetic, and she always sings and stuff whenever our whole family has a meeting, right? She doesn’t do that well, but my relatives always tell her that she should be a singer since she sings without getting embarra.s.sed, and it looks like she took it seriously.”
“10? Isn’t she only in her 2nd year of elementary school then?”
“Yep.”
“I don’t think you should take it so seriously then. I mean, we were like that when we were young. You’d dream of becoming the president, a scientist, or a fireman. We just said whatever looks cool. Maybe kids these days find idols and celebrities cool, so that’s why they’re saying that it’s their dream?”
“I think so too, but the problem is mom. The mother and daughter duo have set their minds on it. Mom’s fanning the flames every single day, so my sister’s always talking about how she’ll become a celebrity.”
Maru could draw the whole picture now. To a parent’s eyes, babies doing cute things might look like talent to them. They would wonder if their child might have talent in music just by seeing their child blow into the recorder, or they might think that their child had talent in soccer when they just kicked a ball around. Even a hedgehog would find their offspring pretty, so how proud would a parent be if their child did a little better in some field than other children? As the parents would have seen the downsides of the compet.i.tive society every single day from the news, it was natural for them to worry about the future of their children. As a parent, any talent that might guarantee their children’s future, on top of studying, would look like a tasty fruit. With minds like that, they would think their child was a superstar even if their child just acted a little cute in front of relatives.
Just then, Maru realized that he deeply sympathized with parents. As though he had first-hand experience, that is. Did something he read from a novel overlap? Maru stopped thinking about it and looked at his cla.s.smate for now.
“From the way you sound, you’re opposed to it, huh.”
“Honestly, I am neither for nor against the idea. But I am a little worried. My mom is - well, how should I put it - a little reckless at times. That’s why my dad is in charge of the accounting at our house.”
“You know stuff like that too?”
“Our family is a little close. Anyway, my mom keeps asking my sister if she wants to become a celebrity, and my sister says she wants to do it, so she’s looking into entertainment agencies, child acting schools, and stuff like that, so I’m a little worried about her.”
“Talent is something you need to polish to be sure of, so I don’t think it’s a bad idea to try it out once. From how you’re talking about acting schools, it sounds like you’re pretty well-off.”
“I guess we are. From the way mom’s putting so much hope in my sister though, I’m reminded of when I was young, so it does make me feel a little off.”
His cla.s.smate stroked up his hair. It seemed that he was feeling complicated.
“Actually, my mom dragged me around to places when I was young, saying that I had talent in playing the piano.”
Hearing the word ‘piano’, Maru had a look at his hands. He had short and blunt fingers, like a typical boy of his age. It seemed far-fetched from the stereotypical image of a pianist’s hands, which were thin and long.
“Having short fingers doesn’t affect playing piano that much. Of course, the ones with long fingers do play better.”
“You seemed to have learned quite a lot, huh?”
“When I was young, yeah. I spent more time playing piano than playing around with friends. That gives you a rough estimate, right?”
“You were quite studious. Do you still play now?”
“As a hobby. The grand piano we bought when I was young is still at the house.”
“Oh, a grand piano….”
It seemed that he wasn’t ‘pretty well-off’ but ‘very well-off’. He could understand his cla.s.smate’s mother’s feelings. If the household was financially well-off, it would allow them to do more things than just study. After all, learning something couldn’t escape the bounds of time and money. Maru looked at his friend, who was smiling awkwardly. If he was tied to the piano his whole youth because of his parents saying that he had talent in the piano, it would be natural for him to worry about his sister.
“What a good brother.”
“Huh?”
“Nothing, just talking to myself. So the conclusion is, you want to help your sister not take the same path as you?”
“If it’s possible, I want to make my mom think about it more deeply. Right now, my sister is excited and saying that she’s going to do her best, but if she ever starts thinking that it isn’t right for her, she would want to stop. But it would be too late by then. My mom will tell her to try just a little more after all. My sister might be quite hot-headed, but she actually has a lot of patience. One time, she fell off a slide midway, which made her knees bleed, but she came home by herself without crying and washed it. She said that mom would worry if she cried. That’s the kind of girl she is, so I think she’ll endure even if she doesn’t want to do it. I don’t want to see that.”
“If it’s like that, you should first talk to your mother about it. Like about how you heard from a friend of yours that being a celebrity is no easy task and that preparing from an early age does not guarantee that she would blossom and stuff like that.”
“Would mom hesitate after just that? I think she will start looking for inst.i.tutes starting tomorrow.”
“Then let her be for now. Perhaps your sister might really have the talent. You said she will look for inst.i.tutes, right? Then try persuading her to send your sister to Film Academy in Gangnam. That place doesn’t have any college test cla.s.ses since it specializes in nurturing professional actors.”
“Film Academy? Is that place good?”
“It is good, but it doesn’t accept just anyone. If you’re going to register here, you need to have her take the test. Also, there are numerous people going there to take the tests.”
“There’s a test to register for an academy?”
“Their intention is to filter their entrants for the pride of their name. You’ll see when you get there. Once you go there, you’ll see photos of current professional actors in the lounge. If you do go there, you’ll probably see what you can do for your sister. Also, she probably won’t pa.s.s in one go. Most of the time, people train for it before going there.”
“If she’s going to fail anyway, doesn’t that have nothing to do with talent?”
“She needs to slip up once. Only people who cling to their dreams even after hearing that they have no talent will make their talent blossom. Talent isn’t like an ATM where you can pull things out at will. In the end, you have to polish it through effort and hard work. Once you start doing that, you’ll eventually start to see the limits of your talent. Only then can you discern whether you have the talent or not. The important thing here is that she needs to do all that willingly. Being pushed to do it by someone else is meaningless. After all, even if she has the talent, it would be the same as not having it if she doesn’t have any intentions of using it.”
After listening, his cla.s.smate nodded.
“I feel much better after talking to you about it. You’re right. It’s not the talent that’s important but her will to do it. Maybe I would have played the piano more seriously if my mom didn’t bother me so much about it.”
His cla.s.smate looked down at his hands. He looked like he was thinking of something old.
“Uhm, Maru.”
“Yeah?”
“Can I ask you questions next time as well?”
Maru replied ‘anytime’ to his friend, who seemed quite cautious. Maru told his friend to give him his phone.
“You don’t know my number, do you?”
“Huh? I don’t.”
“I’ll type it in for you, so call me or text me once something comes up. I’m no one great and I can’t tell you much, but I’ll tell you the things I know.”
“Really? Thank you so much.”
“If you’re so grateful, treat me to a meal. Meat should be good.”
“Okay. I’ll definitely treat you next time.”
His friend smiled and controlled his phone. Soon, Maru got a text. Thank you - it said.
“I did so good talking to you about it. Actually, it was kinda hard to talk to you.”
“To me? Why?”
“Uhm, you look a little cold. I also wondered if it’s okay to ask questions like this. I mean, you’re an actor after all.”
“You’re needlessly worried about it. We’re in the same cla.s.s.”
Maru chuckled and looked at the clock. There were about 10 minutes until the next cla.s.s.
“I’m going to sleep. Wake me up when the teacher comes.”
“Oh, go on. I’ll wake you up as soon as the teacher comes,” his friend made a big deal as he said that.
Maru fell on the desk and closed his eyes. Just as his mind was becoming hazy due to the sleepiness, his vision suddenly brightened up before darkening again, unfurling a completely different scene in front of him. It was the stage he had gotten used to seeing now. The owner of the stage was sitting on the chair today as well.
“These days, I can come here just like that, huh.”
-True. Perhaps it’s because the firmly locked door has opened up a little?
“You’re going on about that door again.”
Maru looked at the masked man. Ever since the summer holidays began, he had been able to talk naturally with this man. If he wanted, he could move his consciousness to this place. The stage, which was sunken in darkness, had the effect of calming the mind, so Maru visited this place pretty often.
-You are giving your friend consultation about his worries, giving him directions, and you even told him your number. Your social skills are splendid.
“Normal people do this much.”
-Really? Someone I know was the king of drawing the line between himself and other people until just a few years ago. He also didn’t interfere with other people’s matters that much.
“There you go again. That’s because when I just came back to life, I couldn’t make out the things around me, so I was really scared. If I think about it now, it feels rather weird. What was I so scared of that stopped me from taking challenges and made me look for safe routes? If I don’t taste failure at this age, when will I?”
-So you’re trying your hand at everything?
“No, that’s not it. I do have to seek things that are beneficial for me. It’s just that I am thinking that I should look around myself a little more. They’re all good people after all.”
-Aren’t people fundamentally evil?
“They might be, but don’t you think they’re generally good? At least the people I came across were like that. Even in my previous life, that is.”
-Previous life. What a magical word. I asked you last time, and you said you died as a salaryman, correct?
“Yes. That was when I was trying my hardest. I, with a couple of colleagues, was doing my best to get promoted. Back then, some lacking kid came under my wing, and I gave him a bad memory. I made him witness a corpse.”
-You said that the new member was the son of an a.s.sociate company, right?
“Yes. He did use his connections to join.”
-It’s a little funny to think about this after you died, but it would’ve been pretty bad if that person decided to betray you. He had the connections while you didn’t after all.
“He was my direct junior. He was a little picky, but he’s not the type of person to betray people.”
-You never know, he might have embezzled some funds.
“Why do you talk so bad about him? Do you have a bad memory related to that or something?”
-No, it’s nothing.
“That was bland.”
-I guess I am a little bland.
Maru looked at the masked man who just laughed.
KTLChamber"s Thoughts
He"s laughing, but he"s not laughing....
Editor"s Note:
I"ll be honest. I did not think the author would revisit the masked Maru so soon. He"s determined to open old wounds huh.