How weird would it be to have to rely on others for your personal back story? He was vulnerable and Hye Sung HAD to help him. * Su Ha seemed so lost after the verdict. Now what havoc will he generate? Revenge is his motive for living and his master plan to jail Su Ha failed. Never thought I’d say this…but I was glad to see Mom Murderer stare down the fruit vendor who continued to lie under his watchful eye. * Frenemy Do Yeon listened to Lawyer Kang and could not ignore that the fruit vendor may have lied when turning in Su Ha.
The reaction of Lawyer Kang, Hye Sung and Su Ha when the verdict was read said it all. When the verdict was read the jury noted that previously Mom Murderer had manipulated the law to his gain and it was possible the same happened here, generating sufficient reasonable doubt. * The copy cat crime argument resonated with the jury.
KISS I CAN HEAR YOUR VOICE TRIAL
The trial continues, finishes and the verdict is delivered. The Kiss: Intimacies from Writers is available from Norton in February 2018.I Hear Your Voice provides consistent strong episodes.
KISS I CAN HEAR YOUR VOICE SERIES
The Kissis a bimonthly series curated by Brian Turner. Kiss, kiss.Īnd my boy opens his mouth wide, taking her whole. She says, “Do you think he loves me?”Īt the end of every conversation, she puckers her lips and brings the screen in and out. She says she wishes she had more time to know him. She says how badly she wants to hold him.
So in the time we have, she wants to observe her grandson’s life. The old woman is too old to travel, her legs unable to withstand the twenty-two hours on a plane. Wants to inspect the state of his diapers. The old woman wants to see every element of my son’s day. My mother says I need to get rid of my scratchy beard. My wife says it’s because I don’t have boobs. He loves me, I know, but he does not kiss me. He does not kiss me, though I spend the majority of the day with him, though he reaches for me and cries when I leave a room. He will take your nose, your forehead, your chin. He will take your face in both hands and open his mouth wide and seek to encapsulate the whole of you. I put my lips on his wrinkled forehead, and like my mother, when she kissed me goodnight those many years ago, I breathed him in. I kept watching out of fear that I might lose him. A silence between my wife’s heavy pants of breath, my reverberating heart.Īfter I clipped his umbilical cord, after the chaos of the night subsided and my wife was resting in her bed, I watched my son-my son!-breathe in a bassinet beside the bed. A silence among the chaos of nurses and orderlies. The clipped voices of the midwife and nurses seemed to suggest otherwise. I wasn’t sure whether she was doing great. I put my head against hers, whispering clichéd encouragement. My wife knotted her hands in the sheets and howled. Inside the room, the midwife could not find my son’s heartbeat. This is what I remember from the outside world, those globes of orange light. The lights outside lit the rain speckles on the glass into tiny globes of orange. But a storm gathered quickly and thrashed against the hospital windows. The hours before he arrived, the sky was cloudless, the day bright. He loves the sound of his name spoken in a foreign tongue. This old woman does not know that we can hear her perfectly she does not need to shout. She says his Thai name, Po, over and over again. The woman says hello in two languages, Thai and English. He grabs for the woman, believing she is there in his Florida home. She appears suddenly from a dark screen, and what he sees is not her face but the top of her forehead and the dome of her black hair. What will emerge, he knows, is an old woman eight thousand miles away, in a country where purple lotuses bloom in ditches, a country currently without a government. When he hears it, he giggles, smiles, and waits. My six-month-old son knows the sound, the electric trilling that comes from the tablet I hold in front of him.