Joe
Junior
- Aug 4, 2018
- 563
Saturday night, I was down town... working for the Eff Bee Eyeeee... sitting in a nest of bad men.... whiskey bottles piling high.
The young man was something else entirely. A handsome, yet boyish-looking face that still had yet to shed baby fat, the man was sitting perfectly straight at the window seat, a half-completed game of Soduko perched on his lap. Ryan, better known as Crown Prince Ryu Min-Ki, gently nodded along to the music playing from his Samsung earbuds. The chartered 747 was half-full, with not a whole lot of Korean natives looking to travel to Canberra in the middle of May. As a student who studied abroad in the majority of his secondary education years, he had accumulated a taste for foreign cultures, mainly those in the West. He listened to The Hollies, N.W.A., and AC/DC as much as any other American or Australian boy. The uniform he had on, however, dictated that he was completely Korean. The black suit coat and trousers signified that he was an officer in the Royal Korean Navy and whenever he put it on, he felt the pride of all those that came before him, and the burden of those that remained expectant of him.
The dinner the night before had been tense, to say the least. All he could remember was Sandy morosely scraping her fork across the china plate, going on about how much she was going to miss her big brother (even though he was gone a majority of the time anyway at the Academy). He will admit, he had barely been home upon leave when his orders for deployment to Canberra came in. His father, the Monarch of Korea, could hardly contain his fury and sorrow when Ryan firmly decided to accept.
"It says 'your deployment, should you choose to accept it', for a reason."
It's my duty.
"I barely saw it for a second, and I already know it's three." A feminine voice jutted through his reverie, ending his thoughts prematurely.
"Hello, Cade-..." Ryan began.
"Oh stop, Ryan. Mind if I sit down?" Cadet-Commander Tan asked, the corners of her lips upturning.
It was quite the friendship that they had. The Crown Prince had first met Cadet-Commander Tan at the annual Service Academy Martial Arts Competition, where Ryan was expected to be a shoo-in for the Judo Gold and the Taekwondo Gold. His first round was matched off against Cadet-Commander Tan, the first female in Royal Air Force Academy history. Walking with the cocky swagger that was confident of the new midshipmen that had passed their first year, he was prepared to send a quick roundhouse kick and expect to be done with the match. The spinning jump quick ended his entire stay at the tournament in six seconds. He was the laughingstock of the entire Naval Academy and Royal Family for months, until a highly competitive Finals round in the next year's tournament turned him into a school hero, when he won by a point decision. The rivalry began, going back and forth, back and forth. A competition to see who could churn out the better test scores, the better shooting scores, the better simulation results. Who could have less casualties while causing more damage? Who could completely disassemble a Daewoo Precision Industries K1 Battle Rifle and reassemble it faster? Who could name the most so-and-so in such-and-such subject?
Soon, however, things began to change. The flying kicks that Tan sent through the air became a hair of a second slower and less powerful. The matches, where they went for blood, became more slower-paced, as if they were dancers looking to extend all the time they could on the floor. Rather than the looks of fury and restrained anger that the other gave when the other won, they turned into something else, something akin to pride for the other. The relationship culminated in Hell Week, a grueling week long Tri-Service combat simulation, with the cadets and midshipmen, who were accustomed to rivalry and competition, forced to cooperate to march almost 100 miles across rough terrain to assault enemy positions, all the while under attack by the maniacs at the Royal Marines. Cadet-Commander Tan and Midshipman-Commander Ryu were paired together, much to their chagrin. However, when night fell and Ryu took watch first, allowing Tan to gain much needed rest, he began to notice things. Like perhaps the way her eyes narrowed when she laughed, or the way she scrunched her nose in irritation when faced with an enormous task.
They came out of Hell Week closer than siblings. Still, they rivaled. Yet now, they had turned into something else, something the cadets and midshipmen have begun noticing. The radio chatter when doing combined exercises became playful instead of terse and straight-to-the-point. They always seemed to be reviewing materials together in the forever-reserved study room.
If only..
"Go ahead," Ryan gestured to the seat next to him.
Tan smiled and sat down.
The young man was something else entirely. A handsome, yet boyish-looking face that still had yet to shed baby fat, the man was sitting perfectly straight at the window seat, a half-completed game of Soduko perched on his lap. Ryan, better known as Crown Prince Ryu Min-Ki, gently nodded along to the music playing from his Samsung earbuds. The chartered 747 was half-full, with not a whole lot of Korean natives looking to travel to Canberra in the middle of May. As a student who studied abroad in the majority of his secondary education years, he had accumulated a taste for foreign cultures, mainly those in the West. He listened to The Hollies, N.W.A., and AC/DC as much as any other American or Australian boy. The uniform he had on, however, dictated that he was completely Korean. The black suit coat and trousers signified that he was an officer in the Royal Korean Navy and whenever he put it on, he felt the pride of all those that came before him, and the burden of those that remained expectant of him.
The dinner the night before had been tense, to say the least. All he could remember was Sandy morosely scraping her fork across the china plate, going on about how much she was going to miss her big brother (even though he was gone a majority of the time anyway at the Academy). He will admit, he had barely been home upon leave when his orders for deployment to Canberra came in. His father, the Monarch of Korea, could hardly contain his fury and sorrow when Ryan firmly decided to accept.
"It says 'your deployment, should you choose to accept it', for a reason."
It's my duty.
"I barely saw it for a second, and I already know it's three." A feminine voice jutted through his reverie, ending his thoughts prematurely.
"Hello, Cade-..." Ryan began.
"Oh stop, Ryan. Mind if I sit down?" Cadet-Commander Tan asked, the corners of her lips upturning.
It was quite the friendship that they had. The Crown Prince had first met Cadet-Commander Tan at the annual Service Academy Martial Arts Competition, where Ryan was expected to be a shoo-in for the Judo Gold and the Taekwondo Gold. His first round was matched off against Cadet-Commander Tan, the first female in Royal Air Force Academy history. Walking with the cocky swagger that was confident of the new midshipmen that had passed their first year, he was prepared to send a quick roundhouse kick and expect to be done with the match. The spinning jump quick ended his entire stay at the tournament in six seconds. He was the laughingstock of the entire Naval Academy and Royal Family for months, until a highly competitive Finals round in the next year's tournament turned him into a school hero, when he won by a point decision. The rivalry began, going back and forth, back and forth. A competition to see who could churn out the better test scores, the better shooting scores, the better simulation results. Who could have less casualties while causing more damage? Who could completely disassemble a Daewoo Precision Industries K1 Battle Rifle and reassemble it faster? Who could name the most so-and-so in such-and-such subject?
Soon, however, things began to change. The flying kicks that Tan sent through the air became a hair of a second slower and less powerful. The matches, where they went for blood, became more slower-paced, as if they were dancers looking to extend all the time they could on the floor. Rather than the looks of fury and restrained anger that the other gave when the other won, they turned into something else, something akin to pride for the other. The relationship culminated in Hell Week, a grueling week long Tri-Service combat simulation, with the cadets and midshipmen, who were accustomed to rivalry and competition, forced to cooperate to march almost 100 miles across rough terrain to assault enemy positions, all the while under attack by the maniacs at the Royal Marines. Cadet-Commander Tan and Midshipman-Commander Ryu were paired together, much to their chagrin. However, when night fell and Ryu took watch first, allowing Tan to gain much needed rest, he began to notice things. Like perhaps the way her eyes narrowed when she laughed, or the way she scrunched her nose in irritation when faced with an enormous task.
They came out of Hell Week closer than siblings. Still, they rivaled. Yet now, they had turned into something else, something the cadets and midshipmen have begun noticing. The radio chatter when doing combined exercises became playful instead of terse and straight-to-the-point. They always seemed to be reviewing materials together in the forever-reserved study room.
If only..
"Go ahead," Ryan gestured to the seat next to him.
Tan smiled and sat down.