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p { font-size: 1.04rem; line-height: 1.55; margin-bottom: 1.3rem; text-align: justify; text-indent: 1.2em; } The Vegetarian by Han Kang EPUB
<!-- PART TWO – Mongolian Mark (brother-in-law’s obsession) --> <div class="part"> <div class="part-number">part two</div> <h2>The Mongolian Mark</h2> <p>Her brother-in-law, a video artist named Seung-ho, had always found Yeong-hye strange. After the suicide attempt, she was hospitalized, then sent home to a flat that smelled of dried herbs and silence. Mr. Cheong abandoned her—not with a divorce, but with a more clinical cruelty: he had her committed to a psychiatric ward for a month. When she emerged, thinner, quieter, she lived alone in a small studio. Seung-ho began visiting under the pretense of “family concern.” But the truth was darker. He had dreamt of her body—not with lust, but with a voyeur’s fascination.</p> <p>One afternoon, he saw her changing through a half-open door. On her left buttock, a bluish-green birthmark shaped like a flame: the Mongolian spot she’d had since infancy. To Seung-ho, it was not a mark but a portal. “She is becoming a plant,” he muttered to himself. “A human root that has forgotten its animal past.” He had recently abandoned his own wife, a woman who painted flowers on porcelain. In Yeong-hye’s emaciated frame, he saw an art piece. A performance of radical passivity.</p> <p>He asked her: “Would you let me film you? Nude, but with flowers painted all over your body. Like a meadow growing from your skin.” Yeong-hye, who spoke rarely now, considered for a long time. Finally, she said: “Will the flowers hide the meat?” He nodded, breathless. And so began the sessions—three nights of filming in a rented warehouse. He brushed peonies, chrysanthemums, and wild roses across her ribs, her thighs, the curve of her neck. She stood motionless for hours, as if performing a slow metamorphosis. The camera captured her stillness, her refusal to be a human with desires. Seung-ho grew obsessed, convinced that only by merging with her—by painting his own body and lying beside her—could he enter that vegetal kingdom.</p> <div class="dream-para"> <em>“Seung-ho’s hands trembled as he painted my spine green. I closed my eyes and saw the forest again. This time, I had no mouth. Only leaves growing from my tongue. The trees whispered: ‘You are almost there. Let go of your name.’ I felt something in me unspool—memory, hunger, shame—all of it falling like dead skin.”</em> </div> <p>But the project shattered when In-hye, his wife and Yeong-hye’s sister, walked into the studio unannounced. She saw her husband naked, his body painted with vines, embracing her sister, both of them lying on a mattress of moss and ferns. In-hye screamed. The police came. Yeong-hye was taken to a psychiatric hospital again, this time indefinitely. Seung-ho fled to another city. And Mr. Cheong finally signed the divorce papers, relieved to be rid of the scandal. Only In-hye remained—torn between fury and a terrible, aching pity.</p> <hr class="star-break" /> </div> Cheong abandoned her—not with a divorce, but with
h2 { font-size: 1.6rem; font-weight: normal; font-family: "Georgia", serif; color: #2f5230; margin-top: 0.5rem; margin-bottom: 1.2rem; } He had dreamt of her body—not with lust,
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