Being A Full-Time Employee C13
by samChapter 13
âThis place is under special observation, so donât worry. If you notice any abnormal signs, let us know immediately.â
âOf course. But you folks still rely on spark detections, donât you? We need better scanners soon.â
The kindly couple, who seemed more like neighborhood elders offering us tea than master craftsmen, clapped their work-hardened palms together as they returned to their workshop. With each strike of those thick, scarred handsâknuckles swollen, nails short and dulledâhints of rainbow-like sparks flared briefly before fading.
Their fists had become hammers, their palms bellows, their nails files. How had they survived the hell of their awakening? I remembered mineâyoung as I was thenâand it had been nightmarish.
Suddenly, my thoughts softened toward Chae Wonu. Whatever his memory hid, he must have suffered too. I glanced at him.
âWe should be writing our wills by now. Want to do it together?â
A grim attempt at reconciliation, a first step toward camaraderie. Yet Wonuâs expression bloomed, as though Iâd invited him to exchange secret letters, not last testaments.
Writing oneâs will never became normal. Not because it drove home mortalityâthough it didâbut because I had no one to leave my last words to. No family, no siblings, no parents, no kin. Friends? Only Seunggyu. Agency colleagues were nothing more than coworkers. Each time I tried, my notes became pointless scribbles. Last time, I wrote:
âSeunggyu, itâs me. If youâre reading this, I must be dead. Honestly, it pisses me off that Iâm the one who died while you lived, but one of us had to survive, right? If youâre expecting an inheritance, sorryâyou get nothing but this request: buy me a slot in the best royal level of the columbarium in the Green Zone. Let me experience a royal suite at least after death. Well, live wellâeven though you wonât.â
This time, I wasnât planning anything different.
I scrawled To. Seunggyu instead of even writing his name properly, then looked around. First time roommates, first time in our dormâs dining/living roomâand we were sitting here drafting wills. Black comedy.
Wonu had already put his pen down and neatly folded his paper. Only one fold, thin paperâso I could vaguely see through. Just a couple short lines. Not even full sentences.
ââŚYouâre really done?â
âYes. Want to see?â
âNo. Definitely not.â
I shook my head fast. After all, a will was a will. His last words to the world, after he was goneâsomething I couldnât bear to read. Our contract was short; I had no desire to bond this deeply.
I wrote the usual junk, then added a postscript, pressing hard with the pen:
âOnly you, Seunggyu, read this. Promise.â
A bit cruel. Heâd be burdened with a letter like this simply because he might survive. I thought about his ridiculous brokerâs fees. My guilt faded fast. If anyone deserved my mess, it was him. That scammer.
Done, I felt hungry.
âWant ramyeon?â
In Korea, eating alone is regarded almost rude. I asked. He nodded eagerly. Heading down to the dorm canteen was a hassle. Besides, I craved something hot, spicy, savory.
âWait a bit.â
Guilt still nagged from our fightâor maybe it was the necklaceâso I decided to treat him well, for once.
Then I opened the cupboardsâand instantly remembered: I never bought any ramen. Obviously, Wonu never would either.
The fridge and pantry were bare. I sighed. Guess weâd eat in the canteen.
Turning, I found Wonu right behind me. Of course. Stuck to me like glue.
ââŚ.â
âI want ramen.â
âThere isnât any. Letâs go to the canteen.â
âBut I want to try ramen.â
âThey all taste the same. Letâs go.â
âRamenâŚâ
And then, absurdly, he pressed a finger to his lips, pleading with damp glittering eyes like some cutesy act stolen from the internet. And damn itâit looked good on him. Infuriating in my head, but visually not bad. I shoved him away.
âStop believing everything you see online.â
What was Iâtraining a puppy? Still, this time I wasnât just annoyed. I was almost laughing. Maybe I was adjusting.
âWas I that bad?â
âOther people might melt for it. Just not me.â
âSo since you donât like it, I wonât do it again.â
I snorted, then added,
âYou know what? Try it on the people who pick fights with you. Bet itâll work perfectly.â
Maybe heâd avoid brawls that way. Odds were slim. Still.
Grumbling, I threw on a windbreaker. Gestured at him.
âIâll cook. You pay.â
âPay?â
âYouâre the one insisting on ramen. Which means we hit the supermarket.â
Wonuâs face lit up. Brighter than after that cheesy act. It was⌠almost cute. Shit. Too cute. Must be necklace effects, warping my perception.
Naturally, the Bureauâs district was one of the rare âstable zones.â Dungeons here either never erupted thanks to advanced tech and huntersâ support, or if they did, monsters never reached the residential areas. This was why I couldnât ever quit the job.
Civilian adoption was rumored, but required rare dungeon materials. And if consumer versions were made? Theyâd go to the Green Zones first. My longing for one grew daily.
As soon as we entered the mart, I grabbed a cart. Overkill for instant noodles, yeah. But if youâre in a mart, you always end up buying more. And my stomach was empty.
I planned to suggest splitting costs. But before I could, Wonu wandered toward the snack aisle and dumped massive multipacks into the cart. Piles. Mountains.
I froze. Stared silently. He blinked back, oblivious. Then suddenly:
âIs there anything you donât like? Iâll take them out.â
ââŚWill you eat all this?â
âYes. Letâs stock up while weâre here.â
ââŚAlright, butââ
âDonât worry. Iâve barely ever used my card. Itâs fine. Buy what you want.â
Did he not know prices had exploded?
âNo, letâs split.â
âI make plenty.â
âYou and every hunter say that. Stillââ
âNo. I make really, really a lot.â
Was that bragging? Or reassurance? I scratched my head. Fine. âThen Iâll lean on you.â
Especially here. Prices near the Bureau were outrageous. Staff got discounts. Contractors like me? Nothing.
âGrab some chili peppers and gochugaru. You eat spicy well?â
âI like sweets.â
ââŚI can tell. But is there even a pot in our dorm?â
âMaybe.â
âYou canât boil hot water anyway, can you?â
I chuckled, imagining Wonu like a water cooler, dispensing hot and cold on command.
But suddenly he raised his fingers. My face froze. I grabbed his hand.
âYou werenât really gonna use your ability here?â
ââŚNever tried hot water. Thought Iâd see.â
âWhy are you like this? Always reckless.â
I forced his hand down. Scolded hard. Tried to pull awayâthen he twisted, gripping mine tight. Startled, I met his gaze.
âIâm dizzy.â
ââŚYou didnât even use your power.â
âBut I feel dizzy. My heartâs racing.â
âFunny, your monitorâs quiet.â
âI still feel it.â
âYouâre faking it, arenât you.â
âI liked hearing you call my name.â
Suddenly, theory clicked in my head. Guides always heard rumors of it. That medication that stabilized huntersâ flaresâit was no true substitute. Counterfeits never matched originals. Drugs blurred the lines, masked side effects, but left so many unknowns. Only genuine compatibility mattered.
After years isolated, finally heâd found his match.
I knew. And I knew⌠this was bad for both of us.
Footnotes
š ëźëŠ´ (ramyeon) â Korean instant noodles, iconic comfort food. Its cultural significance is so vast that inviting someone to eat ramyeon can also carry dating implications.
² ę°ě¸ ě´ëĄ (gakiin iron) â Literally âImprint Theory.â A belief that Guides leave a permanent stabilizing effect on Hunters they match with. Drugs and artificial stabilizers can mimic, but never replace, this authentic resonance.
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