Being A Full-Time Employee C32
by samChapter 32
I bit down hard on Wonuâs fingers, then kissed himâif it could even be called that. His tongue was weak, unresponsive; my own movements felt more like desperate flailing than a real kiss.
âThis isnât working.â
I muttered anxiously, letting my forehead rest against his trembling shoulder. Holding him so close, I could feel every irregular, frantic beat of his heart.
âIs someone in there? If youâre in trouble, say so! Please open the door!â
A staff member was banging from outside. We couldnât stay. I cupped his face, kissed him again, forced him to meet eyes.
âWe have to move. Hold it together.â
âNo one gets hurt.â
His voice was faint as a sigh. I shoved the supplies aside with my foot, flung the door open, and pulled him with me.
Gripping his hand tight, we ran. Even staggering, he kept up. My other hand worked furiously at my phone, booking the nearest hotel.
When we burst outside, rain was crashing down. No forecast had warned of it. This wasnât a drizzleâit was buckets.
If only we had the luxury of ducking into a cafĂ© to wait it out. But we didnât. My outing, our leaves, ruined. And his skin burned hotter through my hand than ever, a fever racing through. That heart shouldâve ruptured a human vessel by now.
Grinding my teeth, I waved frantically for a taxi. He was clinging to sanity by force of willâI had to match it with everything I could give. The driver asked why not just walk the short distance.
âDoesnât matter. Iâll pay whatever. Just get us there fast. As fast as possible.â
We reached the hotel. It had been the closest. I slung his arm across my shoulders, hauling him into the room, dumping him onto the bed.
Carrying someone taller and packed with solid muscle⊠it was no easy thing.
The moment his body hit mattress, he rolled onto his side, curling in on himself. Clenched teeth, his body shook. Anyone with a pulse wouldâve felt pity at the sight. But sympathy wasnât what he needed. Not cocoa. Not empty comfort.
He needed survival.
I chewed my lips until they bled and raided the amenities tray.
âOil. Whereâs oil.â
Most places had only lotion, but fortune cut us slackâmassage oil glinted there. I swept the rest to the floor, crouched by him.
âHunter Chae.â
ââŠ.â
His huge eyes barely cracked, glazed wet. He saw me, but he didnât cry.
Iâd seen Hunters break down sobbing, screaming for parents, thrashing until sedated. Iâd seen them swear they felt their insides screaming with fire, or say they glimpsed entire universes in shock. The pain itself, they said, was madness. Enough to drive anyone insane.
But Wonu did not cry.
âWonuâŠâ
I whispered his name. Skipped the title. His gaze almost, barely, focused back.
âIâll make it so it doesnât hurt.â
Even if the method wasnât pretty. Even if it blurred consent, blurred affection, into primal mechanics closer to violence. Neither of us had the choice not to do this.
Our eyes locked. Then our bodies.
âStill raining?â
His tired voice drifted from the bed, not even opening eyes. The curtains stirred.
âYes. Still raining.â
ââŠThought it was just a shower.â
Fabric scraped shut again. Footsteps padded over.
I lay sprawled, too drained to open my eyes. My energy wasnât goneâbut exhaustion weighed down more than my frame. Rain itself, maybe. Or guiding at breaking point. The mattress dipped under his weight.
âSorry.â
âFor what?â
ââŠBecause of me.â
âWhat, apologizing because I did my job? Donât bother. Keep it.â
My throat felt raw, heavy. Guiding always felt like being wrung dry afterward. Even sex-for-itself wouldâve.
I rolled, opening eyes. He lay below me now, face solemn.
ââŠIâm naked?â
âYour clothes were soaked. I sent to laundry.â
âRight. Fair. Wear shirts more. They suit you.â
ââŠSo you can strip them off faster?â
âNo. Because you look good in them.â
I chuckled. Flicked at the edge of the hotel robe on him. Stretched, joints cracking loudly, aching awkwardness. I let the bedding coax me, luxurious down I hadnât touched in years.
âFigures.â
âWhat does?â His sulking tone matched the pout on his lips. Shoulders hunched, unhappyâbut his chest was still rigid, anger charging through his body, as if ready to fight even now.
I licked dry lips.
When had I last done this because I wanted to, not because I had to? Couldnât recall. Maybe never.
Still, even fatigued, the embers of want stirred.
ââŠDamn. Must be age catching me.â
I muttered, fumbling for my phone. The battery blinked nearly dead. I fired off the bare minimumâlocation, short âsituation stabilizedâ to Bureau management.
âWe should order breakfast.â
ââŠYes.â
âQuickly. Timeâs almost up.â
He said nothing, while I sent the report. Falling flat, I sprawled out and muttered under my breath, Hotel beds. Worth every penny. I promised myself Iâd buy one, someday, if I ever had a real place to live again.
But his face appeared suddenly overhead. Still sulky. He shoved his phone screen to me.
âToo many items to choose. What do you want?â
High-maintenance partner. I snatched the device, tapped my choices, handed back.
âAnd you?â
ââŠWhatever you eat.â
Maybe it wasnât only me whose mind had shifted after what weâd crossed. He crawled behind me, curling in place, arms circling my chest. Whispering into my shoulder, anything you eat is delicious.
ââŠAt this rate, your entire taste will just shift to mine.â
âI donât mind. Tell me what cologne you use.â
âI donât.â
ââŠSo itâs just your body that smells this good?â
ââŠYouâre insane.â
âBut was that line good?â
âNo. It was cheap. Gross.â
I barked with laughter, shoved freeâfailed. His gorilla-long arms had me pinned in seconds. His face hovered near, eyes melancholy.
ââŠI donât remember well. Yesterday. It makes me angry.â
âHow unfortunate. I remember very well.â
âThen what if only you remember?â
âNot worth cherishing anyway. We just both did our respective duties as Guide and Hunter.â
âYou always treat it like that?â
âWhat elseâthink about lunch mid-act?â
ââŠIf thatâs how it is for me, Iâd hate it. But if it was with all your partners? Then I love it.â
ââŠExcuse me?â
âDonât treat me like the others, hyung. Please.â
His childish plea rolled out as he suddenly hugged me tight.
He didnât know the difference between work relationship and personal boundaries. Miscast the genre we were in. Mistook it for romance.
Old me wouldâve cursed, shoved him off in disgust.
But now, I didnât. Not because he shook with desperate strength, not because his breath bled faster into my skin.
Just because⊠sometimes, there didnât need to be a reason.
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