Being A Full-Time Employee C5
by samChapter 5
âCan I go in and eat too?â
âMm, no.â
âWhy not? Itâs not even yours, Hunter Chae Wonu.â
âThatâs true, but thereâs nothing left now anyway. I got caught eating too much of it.â
âHow could you even get caught doing something like that? So careless.â
âYouâre talking like youâd never get caught.â
âOf course not.â
I chuckled and ripped open another pack of snacks. But as I glimpsed how little was left, my eyes went wide.
âHold onâhow can you just eat all of someone elseâs stuff?â
âIâm still growing.â
âExcuse me?â
âCan I open that one too? The spicy one.â
âThis one isnât that hot.â
âIt was spicy to me.â
And again, without hesitation, he tore it open and ate. It was ridiculousâbut I let it slide. After all, even though weâd signed the contract, the pairing could still be annulled during the first monthâs âmatching trial period.â
Or maybe⊠better to end it now?
âYouâd better eat fast. Weâve got our matching test.â
âThatâs at three oâclock.â
âTheyâll move it up.â
Iâd been here enough times to know: schedules almost always got delayed, not pulled forward. But still, I ate quickly. Not because I believed him, but because he suddenly started eating at unbelievable speed. And even though I was no slouch when it came to fast eating, he still beat me.
âHunter Chae, thereâs something I want to ask. Iâm usually not this curious with partners.â
Normally, that was true. Up until now, I had always managed to gather the necessary information by myself. But with himâŠ
âFirst of all, how did you even work without a partner until nowââ
At that moment, our special smartwatches, which every Bureau-affiliated person had to wear, gave an alert.
<Guide Yang Baekgyeom, please report to Diagnostic Room B with your partner Hunter.>
And the time given was âimmediately.â It was only 1:50âfar too early. I turned to glance at Wonu. He was folding up the empty snack wrapper into a sharp point and shaking the crumbs straight into his mouth. I watched the elegant lines of his throat and the round bone at the center shifting as he swallowed.
âLetâs go.â
Wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, he stood. I let out a long sigh as I gathered the trash together. Wonu snatched it up and, in a motion like a free throw, tossed it perfectly into the bin.
âArenât I good?â
ââŠâ
Talking to Seunggyuâs cat, Bbo-Bbi, might have been easier.
Diagnostic Room Bâs formal name was âMedical Diagnostic Laboratory.â As the name implies, it was set up like a lab. But we had another nickname for it: the âMatching Room.â Older folks didnât like the term, saying it sounded like being set up for marriage meetings. Honestlyâwhat difference was there?
Now I understood why theyâd called us early. The room was chaos. Bloodstains splattered here and there. They must have cleaned up already, but even soâthe leftovers made it clear how tough the last matching had been, and that it had ended in failure.
âIt was awful.â
Someone muttered while changing into a lab coat.
âThey were totally incompatible. I had high hopes tooâŠâ
âAnd they were both A-class! How odd.â
âAre you still judging everything on rank? Get your head straight!â
The sharp rebuke cut in. The team leader. Her hair was sleek, not a strand out of place. With a single gesture across her tablet, a hologram flickered, changing to display profiles: Chae Wonu and Yang Baekgyeom.
âRewrite the contracts and put out the new summons.â
âHello, team leader.â
Even her cold tone couldnât dampen my easy manner.
âOh, Baekgyeomâs here. Longer service than our full-time staff, Mr. Outsider Extraordinaire.â
She sounded like sheâd just noticed me, but I knew better. She never slipped. A perfectionistârenowned for flawless results, cold to the bone, pitiless. The subtext of her greeting was clear: Donât mess up.
âBaekgyeom, youâll do fine today, wonât you?â
âWeâll have to see.â
This wasnât my first rodeo. I answered while staring at the blood specks on the wall.
âBy the way, who was in here before us? Someone I know?â
âYou know I canât tell you that.â
âOh come on, then just if theyâre from my agency?â
âSame agency. Thatâs all.â
ââŠAlright.â
âIâll explain it properly to your director. Satisfied?â
âYes.â
So it was Hyungmin.
I smiled bitterly. Still, he wouldnât be badly hurt. The things that happened here defied pre-dungeon common sense entirely.
âOh, cold hands.â
I squinted in mock complaint. The senior researcher Iâd known since my first time here gave my arm a playful slap.
âWhat, like this is the first time.â
âItâs cold every time, thatâs why.â
âAnd every time, youâve done well. So youâll do fine this time too, right?â
âAs usual.â
âWhich means: well.â
She bent her head, checking the pad fixed to my pulse point, whispering softly.
âYouâve got to succeed. It all depends on you.â
âDepends on me? What do you mean?â
âClearing Diagnostic Room.
The chime order echoed. All non-essential personnel left. Researchers pulled back quickly, checking the last of the cables.
âSenior! What do you mean it depends on me?â
âIt meansâif not you, then no one.â
But the reply came from the right. Another light flicked on: the sealed chamber adjoining the Matching Room. Our chairs rotated and shifted until we faced each other directly, floating upright as though in mid-air.
This was the most awkward part. From now on, we could not look away. Blinking was allowedâbut no turning aside. That was how most failures happened; consequently, each matching session was allowed two hours.
It began.
A needle in the crook of my arm slowly pushed in the drug. Cold flowed down my veins. It spread everywhere. I knew it was some kind of stimulant.
The blazing lights began to pulse. Pupils expanded, contracted, over and over. How long had it been? Suddenly the ground beneath seemed to drop away. I felt like Iâd been hurled into an endless abyss, with only my partner and me.
An unbearable isolation. Fear. And only the beat of his heart beside mine to cling to.
My heart slammed wildly, driven by the drug. Wonuâs heart too, a ragged rhythm. Apparently for hunters, the same drug was used as when they forcibly opened abilities.
The time it took for our two heartbeats to alignâthat duration, and the measure of how close to âstableâ the joint rhythm became, determined the matching score.
Through the skull-cracking pain and roaring noise, I forced my stiffened tongue to move.
âDonât⊠call me⊠âthat guyââŠâ
The words âyou rude bastardâ died away on my lips. I was ready to pass out. I clenched my jaws, raised my chin, focusing every scrap of will on staying calm.
The ringing in my ears swelledâso piercing it felt like a drill.
I thought I heard⊠âHyungâ⊠but maybe not. No way to confirm, as my consciousness slipped away into darkness.
âYou okay?â
I kept coughing, waving off concern. A 500ml water bottle emptied in seconds. I crushed the plastic in my fist, spewing out the last mouthful of water. At least it hadnât gone as far as vomitingâbut my whole body felt flayed inside-out.
âWhat about Wonu?â
âAlready worrying about your partner?â
Noâitâs my employment stability I worry about.
âHeâs like you.â
âHe threw up?â
âHe just said he felt dizzy.â
âAnd the numbers?â
âDonât you already know by the symptoms?â
I wiped my damp lips with the back of my hand and grinned. No one bleeding, no one bolting, no one screaming from hallucinations. No need to check the graphsâthe stability was obvious. We were within the acceptable range.
âSo I did good?â
âOf course. Youâre the best.â
The senior raised a thumbs-up. She said it every time, but it still felt good. Straightening my back, I tossed the crumpled bottle into the trash can. Perfect shot.
So maybe, despite the odd, confusing beginningâmaybe we werenât such a bad match.
Exiting the prep room, I spotted Wonu leaving his corresponding one. He looked perfectly fineâcontrary to his earlier complaint of âdizziness.â
âHyung.â
The sudden honorific caught every researcherâs attention. More preciselyâall eyes on Wonu.
âHyung? You two already that close?â
Unfortunately, I remembered all too well the words I had muttered before fainting. âHyung, hyungââso it hadnât been a hallucination. Hopefully he wasnât mockingly repeating it. Hunters, as a breed, were notoriously egotistical. I could only answer with a strained laugh.
âThey say weâre soulmates.â
âOoohâŠâ
The senior chuckled under her breath. It was trueâwhen matching stability scores were especially high, they sometimes used the phrase âdestined soulmates.â Though usually not said by the actual participantsâŠ
âThe scores really came out that good?â
âJust a little above average.â
I leaned in close, almost ventriloquizing.
âThen whyâd he say that? Was he messing with me?â
âFor him, itâs natural. Heâs never once bonded with a Guide before.â
âWhat?!â
Âč Footnote: í (hyung) is a Korean kinship term used by younger males to address older males. It indicates closeness and familiarity, beyond a standard âbrother.â Wonu calling Baekgyeom âhyungâ suggests intimacy and a bond deeper than formality.
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