Being A Full-Time Employee C8
by samChapter 8
I couldnât stand the thought of watching my partner go into battle against monsters looking so crushed and defeated. Even if we werenât close, even if the only things I knew about him were his name and face, I just couldnât.
âBut if youâre not human, then neither am I. So letâs just get along as monsters together.â
âNo room change?â
âNo room change. Honestly, Iâm not confident Iâll work well with you, Hunter Chaeâbut letâs try anyway.â
Something in Wonuâs eyes brightened. He looked like the type whoâd be arrogant, armed with a sharp tongue, dripping with rumors about being foul-tempered and thuggishâbut his actual gestures were strikingly removed from that image. He was closer to an animal, really. Like soothing a child, I tapped at his cheek.
âSo donât look so grim, Hunter Chae. If your spirit withers out there, Iâll be the one who dies. You wouldnât know this, so Iâm telling you.â
My hand was trembling slightly. Sweat was rising from my palm. No training time together, just thrown into battle like this. Fucking hell.
What the hell was he? Did the Bureau want to treat him as a precious rarity, or drag him through the mud? I couldnât tell. They gave me no informationâjust shoved me alongside him like some accessory.
Out there, in the middle of true monsters, my life was tied to this one monster.
âYou can keep me from dying, right?â
Wonu nodded.
âGood. Then trust me, and fight as much as you want.â
Outside, the helicopter landed. The roar of a military chopper was overwhelming. If not for the 30mm-thick glass encasing the Bureau, this place would have been torn apart by the noise alone.
As I turned to leave, Wonu caught my wrist and shoved something into my hand.
âHow many seconds can you hold your breath?â
It was goggles and a waterproof bandana, almost identical to his, though subtly different.
ââŠIâll last as long as I can.â
I steadied my nerves, recalling that Iâd once scored first-class lung capacity, the significance of his question gnawing at me.
All that resolve soon dissolved into wet, miserable reality.
âFuck!â
I raked my hair back. Pointless. Iâd already fallen in eight times, and was guaranteed to fall in twelve more. Goggles were essential. Covering my face below the nose with the bandana, I realized what I really needed wasnât clothâbut an oxygen tank.
âYouâve got to be kidding me.â
Cursing, I adjusted my dagger grip. That was why theyâd given me this instead of a gun. In a water-soaked battlefield, gunpowder was useless. And so I was forced into primitive combat.
My other hand gripped a serrated combat bladeâone the U.S. Navy was said to favor. To an onlooker it might look like I was flailing wildly with both hands, but killing blows actually demanded far more force than one would think.
âGod damn these stubborn bastards!â
Especially when waterborne monsters swarmed, like now.
Once a dungeon manifested, the zone around it was called the Zero Zone. Sometimes the ground collapsed like a sinkhole, other times it was blocked off as though a barrier had fallen. The thickness of these âenergy veilsâ determined the dungeonâs grade. This one, mercifully, only a B-gradeânot too severe.
But stillâŠ
âHunter Chae Wonu!â
This dungeon zone had inconveniently manifested right on a road. Casualties: twenty-one. Whether drivers had escaped or not, their cars were wrecked, torn from the asphalt, suspended in the air. Some still intact, stacked three high like towersâgood enough makeshift platforms to buy time.
I scrambled to the very top of the wrecked stack, tugging on fresh gloves. Just as I finished pulling them onâsuddenly, water struck me hard from behind. My head rang. My gloves were drenched.
âHunter Chae!â
I held my tongue, stopping just short of shouting, You little shit! His use of power was reckless, tossed around like a child throwing toys. And yetâwouldnât two-person squads normally fight together? Theyâd deliberately split us two off into our own zone.
At my shout, Wonu turned, tearing a locked car door straight off its hinges. Inside the dungeon zone, huntersâ physical strength was greatly enhanced, their affinity aligning with the zone itself. He set the door beneath him and rode it like a surfboard. Posture and all.
âYou canât meanâŠâ
Thereâs a reason our ancestors left behind the proverb about temptation killing a manâWonu proved it true. With a flick of his hand, he raised a hideous wave of blood and flesh from below. Grotesque. My appetite vanished.
âYou called?â
ââŠYou couldnât arrive normally for once?â
âIn here, whatâs normal?â
Bounding onto the wreck tower where I stood, his grin said wasnât that fun?. My guts twisted. I shouldâve paired with someone fit for speech.
âWell? Didnât I ride that well?â
He fired rapid droplets of water at a flying monster swooping from behind me even as he spoke. I got showered in gore and glared at him.
âGreat surfing, lousy fighting.â
âReally? Iâve always racked up the highest death counts.â
âItâs not quantity. Itâs quality.â
As I slashed a bug-like monster lunging for his back, I twisted my grip, rotating hard to crack through its armor with a sickening crunch. Knowing its type carried mountain-like features, I planted a kick and shoved it off before the green blood could touch me, sacrificing one dagger in the process.
âYou fight dirty. No fundamentals. Keep this up and youâll die like a dog.â
Then behind us, a blue light flaredâthe Esper team had reached the dungeonâs core energy pillar. Only they could neutralize a dungeonâs core, which was why Espers, despite being near-useless in direct combat, were treated like treasures.
An alarm came through my earpiece.
âFifteen minutes remaining.â
The countdown.
âCanât we talk about this again in fifteen minutes?â
âIf youâre still alive by then.â
âAh, youâre joking, right?â
Wonu burst into loud laughter. Then, without warning, pulled me into his arms. Despite only an hourâs worth of coordination together, I knew instantly what he was about to attempt. With a sigh, I pinched my nose shut.
From below, countless beads of water rose and exploded. The air thickened with moisture. Thousands of water droplets split into bullets, each locking onto a target.
âWhen I do this, it really hurts.â
âAnd?â
âSo hold me tight.â
Unbelievable little brat.
But wasnât that exactly why I was hired? I yanked off the gloves, tore the bandana down, wrapped my arms firm around him, pressing our cheeks together.
âRaise hell. Iâll deal with it.â
âExciting!â
Exciting? For meâit was hell.
I held my breath, knowing that once the countdown began, battle shifted drastically. The monstersâ eyes all burned crimson, frenzy descending. From now on, this was no measured fight. It was a pure street brawl, survival by brutality, while the Espers worked.
And in that chaos, Wonuâs ability dazzled. Before now, it had been impressiveâbut in this frenzy, it was blinding.
âBeautiful, isnât it?â
The glowing monster eyes, the headlights flicked on in vehicles all aroundâreflected in the water droplets, glittered like Christmas tree lights. Red as blood, perfectly suited.
For an instant I just stared, dazedâuntil Wonuâs knees buckled without warning. I grabbed him quickly, hauling his arm over my shoulder. His body was hot. His face burned crimson, vessels burst in his eyes.
âTell me the truth. You didnât need to go this far, did you.â
âOf course not. They were all small fry.â
âThen why?â
âFirst team play. I wanted to look cool.â
âDonât waste yourself like that again.â
âWhy?â
There it was againâhis endless curiosity, blind to circumstance. I yanked his belt open, slid my hand under his shirt, and braced his waist, answering:
âBecause no matter how hard a kid tries to look cool, all he looks is cute.â
âWhy say that? A younger one can look cool too.â
âGuess Iâm conservative.â
Sliding down from the car hoods, I smashed a window with my useless gun, unlocked the door, and pushed him into the seat. Focus was impossible up there.
His face blazing, I cupped his cheek with my palm. I didnât normally do thisâonce, a former partner and I had gotten so toxic weâd snarl just at seeing each other. Back then, when Iâd tried this gesture, Iâd been socked for my trouble. But embracing like thisâthat was the way.
If things dragged on, it might come to pressing foreheads together, but I dreaded that. Too intimate. Hopefully, this would be enough. After allâwe hadnât even known each other for more than a few days.
âFocus. The second wave is almost here.â
Every five minutesâthe monsters spawned en masse. Thereâd be three such waves, so weâd better be ready. Thatâs why this reckless brat shouldnât have shown off earlier.
âIt feels like⊠all my heatâs draining out through your hand.â
âGood. Thatâs what we want.â
My heart pounded, heavyâfor two hearts, pressed against my chest. It was crushing, suffocating, yet strangely addictive. My mouth dried. I licked my cracked lips, sweat trickling down my neck in this suffocating humidity.
ââŠAh.â
Suddenlyâfingers brushed up my thigh.
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