Jiro Han sat alone at the edge of the cafeteria, with an untouched tray of food sitting before him. All of this din seemed to be distant and faint, like waves crashing in on a far-off shore. Laughter, the clattering of trays, the chatter of classmates never reached him. His eyes were fixed on the table, his thoughts drifting along the same dreary routine that had defined his high school life for the last two years.
Every day was the same. Get up, go to school, endure the ridicule, and come home. It had become a sort of rhythm. A predictable, monotonous beat that he couldn't escape. "Hey, look who's here. It's the school ghost.
Jiro didn't need to look up to know who it was. He could hear the mocking tone, the thudding footsteps of Kyung-Ho Park and his gang making their way toward him. The bullies. The kings of the school.
Kyung-Ho was tall, muscular, and built like a wall of stone. His wide grin revealed an arrogance that made most of the students either bow down or keep their heads down in fear. Jiro, however, had long since learned to do neither. He'd learned that doing nothing was often the best defense.
"Don't mind us, Jiro," Kyung-Ho continued, his voice thick with sarcasm. "We're just here to see if the food's as bad as your face." His gang of equally unremarkable lackeys snickered.
He gazed directly down on the table. Long fingers gripped over at his end of his tray. Jiro didn't even know if he hated which: their laughter or hollow feeling inside that he honestly didn't care. He really, really didn't care.
"Give him a little reminder of his place.
Before Jiro could react, Kyung-Ho reached across the table, flipping his tray over in one swift motion. The mashed potatoes, the meatloaf, the broccoli—everything splattered across the table and onto Jiro's shirt.
The cafeteria erupted into laughter, but Jiro didn't flinch. His eyes remained locked on the mess now staining his uniform. He couldn't even bring himself to care.
Kyung-Ho leaned in close, his breath hot on Jiro's face. "You should be grateful we even let you stay here, loser. No one cares about you. No one ever will."
There it was again—the bitterness that had been his constant companion for as long as he could remember. The belief that he was invisible, nothing more than a shadow passing through their lives. But what really stung was the fact that Kyung-Ho wasn't wrong.
"Yeah, you're right," Jiro muttered under his breath, barely audible over the noise.
"What did you say?" Kyung-Ho's voice dropped, confused. He had expected defiance, resistance, or at least anger. What he didn't expect was Jiro's quiet acceptance.
Jiro didn't say anything. He slowly stood up, his eyes still fixed on the mess of food on the table. His fingers curled into fists, but not out of anger. He was tired. Tired of fighting, tired of being the punchline, tired of being the guy everyone could kick around.
He turned and walked away, ignoring the jeers and shoves from Kyung-Ho's gang. They didn't matter.
But just as he was about to leave the cafeteria, something unusual happened.
A flash of light.
It was not physical, not like bright camera flashes but something in the head—the sudden awakening of his senses. The dull and muted world around him was suddenly sharp and clear. The buzz of the cafeteria noise was distinct. Clattering trays, the buzz of people talking, and the humming of the air conditioner were all one huge orchestra of sound that became almost overwhelming.
He instinctively turned around and glanced through the room. And then he saw it.
A small movement within the air. The subtle motion of Kyung-Ho's eyes. A light flicker of intent. A slight tension within the stance.
Jiro can see it. He feels it-the smallest of smallest hints of a threat in time before Kyung-Ho makes his next play.
Suddenly, time stood still. Jiro could see every little thing: the twitch of Kyung-Ho's hand as he went to reach for the tray, the position of his foot, the way his body leaned forward. It wasn't a question of perception; it was an understanding. It was as if he could see the very essence of their movements.
Without thinking, Jiro stepped to the side just as Kyung-Ho lunged, his fist cutting through the air where Jiro had been standing a split second before. The movement was so smooth, so effortless, that it almost felt as if Jiro had anticipated it—because, in a way, he had.
Kyung-Ho stumbled forward, caught off guard. The sudden shock on his face was enough to make Jiro pause.
For the first time in years, Jiro felt something else—a spark of clarity. A feeling of control.
"Whoa, what the hell…?" Kyung-Ho's voice trailed off, his confusion palpable. His gang didn't know what to make of what had just happened. Neither did Jiro.
He didn't understand it, but he didn't need to.
He had never felt such a feeling since he had lost it; this time he had felt that, and it was power.
This was the first time in his life that Jiro Han was not a spectator in his own life. He could see the way ahead of him. He could feel the change in the air. He could predict the world around him—not perfectly, but enough.
His heart thumped in his chest, and as he glanced back at Kyung-Ho and his gang, something shifted in Jiro. He was not going to let this moment slip away.
He turned, his feet carrying him out of the cafeteria, into the world, which seemed somehow… different.
For the first time in a while, Jiro felt that he could breathe.