Being A Full-Time Employee C3
by samChapter 3
âHow was it for you?â
Seunggyu asked while mixing rice into his soup. Even as he mashed the rice together, he shoveled it into his mouth at an incredible pace. He used to be the last one to eat in the cafeteria, but his tight, minute-by-minute survival schedule had turned him into this. I set down my spoon on my spotless tray, without a single grain of rice left, and proudly pushed forward my chest.
<Pass Card> Beneath the pass card was written the number of the hunter I was in charge of: 170009. They said they used numbers instead of names for security purposes, but thinking of the young cash cow I had been assigned, I doubted whether it was effective at all. That kidâs face was bound to stand out wherever he went.
âOh, impressive.â
As if he had expected Iâd naturally get assigned to someone, Seunggyu let out a perfunctory sound of admiration and buried his face back into his tray. Hyungmin, on the other hand, stared at me with envy. For us external contractors, the hunterâs selection was practically the final interview. I had passed, while Hyungmin had not.
âHow was he? They said he was young.â
âHeâs young.â
I had no desire to say much else.
After all, I knew nothing about him except his looks.
âHeâs pretty.â
âIsnât he a guy?â
âYeah. A pretty guy.â
That was the most accurate description. Even when he slowly opened his eyelids as if half-asleep, he looked beautiful. What I had thought of as a flawâthe dried blood caked on his faceâactually looked almost like part of a deliberate concept once I saw the face fully revealed. His skin was so pale it looked nearly bloodless, his eyebrows were striking, and his eyelashes were long, emitting a subtle magnetism.
Iâd never once fallen behind anyone in looks, but his faceâso beautiful in a different kind of wayâwas enough to dent my pride.
âBetter get along with him.â
âWhat do you mean, get along? Weâll split soon enough anyway. Itâs just a one-year contract. Thatâs your specialty, isnât it? One year, exactly, no matter who it is.â
âWell, yeahâŠâ
Just when it seemed like Seunggyu had more to say, he burped and suddenly got to his feet. His tray was already empty.
âHey, I gotta go. Catch you later.â
He often left mid-conversation without common sense or etiquette. I only gave him a little wave. Hyungmin, however, was crestfallen.
âUm, but what about me? I was the only one who didnât get the necklace of acceptance!â
The kid seemed to think this was one of those hip-hop survival shows that used to be popular before dungeon breaks.
Unsurprisingly, Hyungmin looked anxiousâemployment instability will do that. But this world was cold and merciless, and Seunggyu had a firm personal rule that for those left without employment, he would only cover the equivalent of a taxiâs base fare.
âCharge him 4,500 won.â
Even after the world had turned upside down, inflation crept forward bit by bit. Taxi fares were no exception.
At this point, I could recite the non-disclosure clause and employment contract with my eyes closed. Signing was quick in this caseâelectronic signature only, on the provided tablet, no in-person formalities.
The first day was always my favorite. All you did was finish contract-related paperwork, and then the schedule for the day was over. I lay down in the assigned lodging, burying my face in the scent of clean bedding. Breathing deeply, in and out, I inevitably thought of my hunter partner.
âNice to meet you?â
I remembered how he had awkwardly just stared at my outstretched hand, staying silent for a long while, until finally he let out a loud âAhâ as if something had burst inside him.
âI⊠I canât be touched right now. My guiding levels are at the edge.â
âWonu! Hereâs the pill.â
Before he finished speaking, one of the researchers hurried over and handed him a tablet. The pill looked absurdly small and cuteâalmost so colorful and dainty it reminded me of LSD. Hunter Chae Wonu took it without even water, then immediately opened his mouth wide in front of me.
ââŠ?â
âTo show that I ate it all.â
âOh, I see.â
I scratched my head, nodded, and clapped lightly for him.
âWell done.â
Still nodding, Chae Wonu walked away toward something that looked like a dentistâs chair. Lying down with practiced ease, he immediately stripped off his shirt. His actions were so unpredictable that I felt like Hyungmin, dumbly frozen as if it were my first day here as well.
âStart.â
With a drowsy, languid voice, Wonu spoke. At his word, various devices were attached all over his body, and soon monitors filled with sharply oscillating graphs. The researchers began whispering among themselves in concern.
Even as he yawned in front of what were obviously abnormal readings, Wonu looked down at me through half-lidded eyes. Though reclined, he gave me the impression of being looked down on.
âGo tell them that Hunter Chae will do it.â
âDo what?â
âYouâre the Guide, arenât you?â
âYes.â
âThen go ahead. Do it.â
Suddenly, this sterile, immaculate place erupted in a small commotion. The same researcher who had given him the pill cried out in a voice choked with emotion:
âWonu!â
âIâm going to sleep now.â
But oblivious to the fuss around him, Chae Wonu calmly fastened the straps onto his own wrists and closed his eyes. That was it. That was how it happened.
And I was hired.
âHeâs one really strange bastard.â
I muttered after finishing the recollection.
âWhat is?â
The sudden voice startled me. I wasnât someone who usually reacted openly to shocksâwhen I was surprised, my heart would pound but my face showed nothing. This time, though, I quickly raised my torso to look at the source.
Standing there was none other than the very subject of my behind-his-back grumbling.
âMe? The strange bastard?â
ââŠWhat are you doing here?â
âThis is my room.â
âAh⊠This is Room 608, right?â
âYes.â
âThen itâs my room. There must be some mistakeâŠâ
âNo. Itâs my room too. Weâre sharing it.â
Waitâwas the Bureau running out of budget? No way. With dungeons spewing rare items and materials like rain into Korea, there was no chance the country was short on funds.
Chae Wonu pointed first at his chest and then at me.
âWeâre sharing. Us.â
âUh⊠why?â
âBecause I said I wanted to.â
âUh⊠why?â
âYouâre my partner. Isnât that what partners do?â
For a moment, I wondered if Iâd skimmed the contract too quickly. Had I signed up not as a guiding partner but as a different kind of partner entirely? But I was seven years older than Wonu, and after so many near-catastrophes in the early days of this job, I had learned never to sink myself into irreversible situations. I smiled gently.
âNormally, hunters and guides have separate rooms. We only work together during missions, and usually eat separately too.â
âBut my senior sleeps with his Guide.â
âAh, then your compatibility rate must be really lowâŠâ
Since guiding stabilized huntersâ out-of-control powers through physical contact, if matching rates were too low, sometimes measures as drastic as that were taken. It could happen⊠but wait, was he implying he wanted that with me?
âYou mean you asked for a shared room just because you want to sleep with me?â
âNo.â
âThen why?â
âBecause you seemed interesting.â
âMe? Iâm not that funny a guy. Hunter Chae, good-looking people normally donât get humor on top of it all.â
âReally? I found you funny.â
ââŠWow.â
This conversation didnât make sense. Iâd met countless hunters, but none like this.
Wonu seemed utterly indifferent to my bewilderment. Why he wanted to be roommates, I couldnât understand. Usually, the Hunter Bureau asked the consent of both parties. This kind of forced arrangement was unheard of. Where would I even lodge my complaint in such a case? And would anyone take it seriously?
As though reading my thoughts, Wonu glanced away from his wristwatch.
âEven if you ask them to change it, they wonât. I specifically said it has to be with you.â
âHey.â
âIâve got an exam left, so I need to step out.â
âHey.â
âAnd that blanketâyou were using mine. Iâve done all sorts of things with it already.â
For the first time in my life, the man Yang Baekgyeomâwho had never once lost his pride or been cowed into silenceâwas speechless. From the very moment I had been sniffling in the bedding, he must have been watching me. This brat.
âJust kidding.â
He tossed that out casually, with a tone that did not sound like a joke at all, and left just as abruptly as he had entered.
I only came to my senses after I heard the click of the front door lock. I leapt up from the bed, tore off the blankets and sheets, and began searching for a washing machine.
The second morning.
Hyungminâs expression and mine were the exact opposite of yesterdayâs.
âTurns out heâs not such a bad guy. He was just sensitive because heâd only just returned from the field! Once he saw the matching rate, he was satisfied and immediately agreed to pair up. You know how at first the guiding balance hurts, right? Well, for me, it didnât hurt at all! I didnât even get dizzy or throw up! Oh, I also heard somethingâhyung, werenât you the one who once vomited whileâŠâ
âHyungmin.â
âYes?â
âCould you please be quiet?â
I pressed at my throbbing temple while I begged. But Hyungmin, as usual, had no awareness.
âWhy? Are you sick? Did you guide yesterday? I thought they decide based on the matching rate, so I finished mine in the morning. But I didnât see you there. Did you already go? Was it a bad match?â
I didnât answer. I simply held my tray and got up.
âHuh? Youâre done eating already?â
âNo. Iâm escaping from a murderer.â
âAâ a murderer?â
âYeah. A Question Mark Murderer.â
âWhatâs that?â
âThatâs you, Hyungmin.â
While Hyungmin stood blinking in confusion, completely failing to get it, I walked off toward a quiet corner.
Âč Footnote: In Korea, hunter âcompatibilityâ (matching rates) with guides determines how effective the guiding is. If rates are low, more extreme or prolonged physical measures may be needed to stabilize them. This is why Wonuâs comment about guides sleeping with hunters had suggestive implications.
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