Rain slapped the hanok roof as Ha-eun slid her hidden sash into the pouch and pressed her back to the cool wood. She had one choice before dawn: vanish with the man she loved or return and carry a name that would close a thousand doors. The ribbon smelled faintly of riverweed and smoke; it knotted a promise she could not forget.
Outside, a dog barked twice and the streetlight blinked; inside, the house kept its polite quiet. She traced the worn stitch on her sleeve and felt the pulse at her throat. The decision sat like a stone in one hand and a feather in the other. At the willow, her lover did not come.
The Han River cuts through Seoul like a slow machine—daylight pulls people out to laugh and kids fly kites; at night the banks fold inward and the city listens. Mist swaddles the lamps and the river keeps its private hours; on some nights it answers with a voice. The city’s usual noise thinned to the soft work of tide and breath; in that hour every scrape or whisper felt magnified. She went to the willow with a ribbon knotted to a promise, and when Min-jae did not come the space where his step should have been became a sharp, immediate thing—her plan unravelled in full sight. That absence was the inciting trigger; it reshaped everything that followed.
The Betrothal
Seoul, 1923.
Ha-eun sat by her window and listened to water working the shore. The sound had comforted her since childhood; tonight it thrummed against her like an alarm. Her father had arranged a marriage to Choi Joon-ho, a match that promised standing and safety but not the small wild things her heart wanted.
She thought of Lee Min-jae—his palms callused from nets, his grin sudden as a sun-break. Beneath the willows they had spoken of leaving, of a life without titles. That night she slipped a note into the hands of a friend—meet me at the willow; we leave before dawn.
She moved through narrow lanes with a cloak pulled low. Cold air bit her face; blown river scent left salt on her lips. Leaves brushed her cheeks and the willow’s voice sounded like a low chord. She waited with the ribbon wound white in her fist. The moon leaned west; hours thinned like spun glass.
Her watch grew heavy with each minute. She counted the lamplight reflections on the water, each one a small, impossible promise. When Min-jae did not come, the silence settled into her like a cold stone. She waited until the lamplight burned low and then dawn rose with no shoe on the path; in the ledger of excuses there were no entries for him. Grief arrived not as a cry but as a hollow weight that made her hands tremble.
Before light she slipped back through the alleys, the sash heavier than memory. In the morning, her father’s home smelled of tea and ink, and the negotiations for the marriage felt like a tide she could not resist. That evening she became Joon-ho’s bride.
The Unforgiving Marriage
Joon-ho was a man who measured honor and kept accounts; he treated life as though it were a ledger. He watched Ha-eun with a steady, bureaucratic anger—her gaze always drifting to the window.
Rumors threaded through servants’ conversations: a fisherman’s son, meetings by the willows. Small things braided into accusation: a stray ribbon found in a courtyard, a servant overhearing a laugh. One night, in the hush before the meal, he asked her directly.
"Do you love me, Ha-eun?"
She answered with what she could: "You are my husband."
He read the spaces in her answer and found the one he feared. His patience became a watchful blade; he began to test the edges of her freedom with questions and silences.
She learned to measure her words. A smile might be read as defiance; a pause might be evidence. In the kitchen the servants watched the change in the household—plates set tighter, conversations clipped. At night Ha-eun lay awake and listened to the house breathe, counting the small noises that might be footsteps.
That evening he followed her beneath the willows.


















