Episode 2
A faint voice echoed somewhere.
āMs. Ha Eunrae?ā
A woman was standing in front of her.
Was this a hospital?
Then this person must be⦠a doctor? But she didnāt look like one. No white coat, nothing clinical.
Wire-rim glasses, a checkered shirt, and a soft, slightly disheveled appearance with a gentle, almost cute face.
ā¦Wait.
I recognize her.
Sheās a famous film director.
Jegal Seyun.
She had to be well into her forties, but⦠she looked younger than I remembered.
And then she spoke.
āWerenāt you here for the audition for Living with a Ghost?ā
Living with a Ghost?
That was the title of Jegal Seyunās independent film.
It was the very first audition I ever attended.
āPlease wait a moment while we set up the camera.ā
She said that and immediately walked into the audition room.
Left alone, I looked aroundāand then I realized.
āIāve regressed.ā
It was a quick conclusion, typical of someone used to thinking in cinematic logic.
There were clues, of course.
The phone showing a date in 20XX.
And above allā
the script in my hand.
Living with a Ghost.
This was Jegal Seyunās film academy graduation project.
Twelve years ago, it was also the audition introduced to me by a photography student who attended the same school as her.
But the word āgraduation projectā hadnāt impressed me back then.
āGraduation film? So itās just a student project, right?ā
At the time, I was already making decent money as an online shopping mall model, so it didnāt seem appealing.
āItās a film academy graduation project, so itās not just a student film⦠and itās feature-length. The pay should be good.ā
But the moment I heard āgood pay,ā my eyes changed.
Back then, my family was constantly causing trouble, and no matter how much I earned, it all disappeared immediately.
āI didnāt even know what a film academy was back then.ā
A āfilm academyā is one of the most prestigious film schools in Asia.
Their graduation works are often submitted to international film festivals, and for actors, appearing in them is considered a major opportunity.
But I didnāt know any of that then.
So I naturally assumed I would be chosen.
And it wasnāt a strange assumption.
I glanced at the mirror across the hall.
I was young.
And pretty.
āWell, Iām still pretty twelve years later.ā
At twenty-one, Ha Eunrae had a striking presence.
Photographers begged to feature her in personal projects, and film students constantly asked her to act in theirs.
Andā
My skin.
I stared at my reflection.
After the ādebt scandalā years later, stress and procedures had ruined itāfillers, Botox, fat repositioning.
All gone now.
No artificial stiffness. No forced expressions.
It felt like I had returned to my body before an injury.
So this is what they call a cheat code.
I smiled at myself.
What made regression most satisfying was this:
āI havenāt met Kim Doun yet.ā
The last emotion I felt before dying was regret.
Regret over choosing Kim Doun to escape my disastrous family.
I looked at my empty ring finger.
This time, I wonāt live like that.
Not for my family.
Only for myself.
For what I love.
For the moments I feel most alive.
For acting.
Only that.
Just thenā
Someone called my name.
āMs. Ha Eunrae.ā
āYes?ā
I turned around.
A staff member gestured.
āPlease come inside.ā
It was time for the audition.
For reference, twelve years ago I completely embarrassed myself here.
I failed, naturally.
But now my acting skills are different.
The only problem wasā
ā¦I havenāt read the script yet.
Iāve only seen this film twice!
Inside the audition room, director Jegal Seyun sat with visible tension.
While preparing her graduation film, she had rewritten the script multiple times.
And that led to a problem.
I donāt like the scriptā¦
She preferred comedy, so the concept was playful:
A woman who believes she is a ghost, and a man who knows she is not.
The female lead, Soo-in, survives a car accident that kills her parents.
Unable to cope with survivorās guilt, she convinces herself she is already deadāwandering the world as a ghost.
She eats funeral meals, avoids sunlight, rarely bathes, and sleeps on the floor.
All comedic expressions of deep psychological trauma.
So far, the professors had praised it.
Butā
āEverything breaks once the male lead appears.ā
That was the unanimous feedback.
So⦠Iām bad at romance.
The moment she tried to turn it into a romantic relationship, everything collapsed into clichƩs and awkward dialogue.
The more she revised it, the worse it became.
And now her thoughts were completely stuck on the script.
Thenā
āUm⦠Director?ā
A woman called her.
Cat-like eyes, striking features, flawless skin, and a face that would make anyone look twice on the street.
Butā
Actors are always like this.
No matter how pretty they are, many lose their presence on camera.
That was her initial thought as she glanced at the camera beside her.
Thenā
ā¦!
Wait.
She looks even better on camera?
Her eyes especially. Alive. Magnetic.
And if Iām not mistakenā
She knows her angles.
For a newcomer, that was rare.
Like someone with ten years of experienceā¦
But her rƩsumƩ showed no significant acting history.
Which meantā
Itās natural talent.
Just as she was thinking thisā
āWould it be okay if I slightly adjusted the script and tried improvisation?ā
The applicant, Ha Eunrae, spoke unexpectedly.
Change the script?
Jegal Seyunās expectations dropped slightly.
Beautiful face, but maybe difficult to work with.
There were actors like thatāalways trying to interfere with direction.
Thinking they knew better because they āstudied film.ā
They treat indie films like a joke.
Maybe she was one of those types.
But then she met Ha Eunraeās eyes.
And paused.
Something about that gazeā¦
As if she was being seen through.
Even though she was the director, older by over a decade.
āā¦Fine. Go ahead. Which scene will you do?ā
Ha Eunrae pointed at the script.
āThe first meeting scene.ā
āā¦!ā
That was exactly where the script started to fall apart.
The beginning of the relationship between the two leads.
So sheās choosing that part?
For a moment, it felt like the twenty-one-year-old girl in front of her was reading her thoughts.
And thatā
made Jegal Seyun, thirty-three years old, feel strangely exposed.






