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/* story divisions: three parts like the novel */ .part { margin-top: 2.8rem; } The Vegetarian by Han Kang EPUB
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<!-- PART ONE – The Wife’s Refusal --> <div class="part"> <div class="part-number">part one</div> <h2>The Stain of Blood</h2> <p>Before the nightmares, Yeong-hye had been a ghost of a woman—polite, dutiful, existing in the gray margins of her husband’s schedule. Mr. Cheong, a middling office manager, liked her for her mediocrity. She never argued, never asked for more than the leftover portions of his life. But on the fourth Tuesday of March, Yeong-hye cleared the refrigerator of every piece of flesh. Beef, pork, chicken, even the frozen mackerel—all of it dumped into black plastic bags and set by the curb before dawn. When Mr. Cheong stumbled into the kitchen, yawning for his coffee, he found her staring at an empty white cutting board. On it lay only a single radish and three wilting scallions.</p> <p>“Where is the bulgogi? My mother sent the marinated ribs just yesterday.” He spoke slowly, as though to a child who had hidden his toy. Yeong-hye’s eyes were glassy, fixed on the pale morning light through the window. “I cannot eat meat anymore,” she said. The words fell flat, without drama. Mr. Cheong laughed, a short bark. “What nonsense. You’ll ruin your health. And what will we serve when my colleagues come over?” But she did not reply. She simply turned and began to wash the rice, her thin wrists moving mechanically.</p> <p>That evening, Mr. Cheong sat across from a plate of seasoned spinach, bean sprouts, and a bowl of cloudy soybean paste stew—no beef stock, only vegetables. He ate in resentful silence. Yeong-hye picked at a piece of tofu, chewing each morsel as if it were a sacrament. After dinner she washed the dishes, then sat in the dark living room, her back straight, hands resting on her knees. She looked like a woman waiting for a train that would never arrive.</p> <div class="dream-para"> <em>“In my dream, I walked through a forest where every tree had eyes. The animals didn’t run from me. A deer licked my palm and said: ‘You remember, don’t you? You used to be one of us.’ Then I woke up with my pillow soaked through, and I knew—I could never put death inside my body again.”</em> </div> <p>The family dinner three weeks later became the breaking point. Yeong-hye’s father, a stern veteran of the Korean War, shoved a piece of braised pork belly toward her lips. “A daughter who refuses her father’s blessing. Eat, or you shame this house.” She kept her mouth clenched, tears streaming. Her older sister, In-hye, tried to intervene. Her brother-in-law, a timid artist, looked away. Finally, Yeong-hye did something no one ever expected: she took the meat from the chopsticks, placed it calmly on the table, then picked up a fruit knife and sliced her own wrist. Not deep enough to die—but enough to make blood blossom across the white tablecloth. “I don’t want to be a carnivore anymore,” she whispered. And in that moment, she became something else: not a wife, not a daughter. A fracture.</p> <hr class="star-break" /> </div> She never argued, never asked for more than
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