Being A Full-Time Employee C6
by samChapter 6
Even I, not one to be easily startled, couldnât help but raise my voice this time. The senior researcher covered her mouth and muttered, âOh dear, maybe I shouldnât have said that.â
Meanwhile, oblivious to the mood, Chae Wonu tilted his head and strode closer. We stood about ten meters apart, holding our result reports.
âNot bad.â
Iâd once achieved a matching score as high as 89 percentâso the 78 percent with Wonu wasnât bad at all. This was exactly why, in Gwak Seunggyuâs agency, I boasted the highest market value: whoever I was paired with, I always pulled solid results.
Still, people called this number a compatibility score, but that didnât truly mean romantic or personal compatibility. I glanced at my inscrutable partner standing beside me. He was still staring intently at the report.
âThis is our compatibility rating?â
He suddenly turned to me and shoved the paper forward, but what he was pointing to wasnât the score I saw. It was his ability stability number. Only 34 percent.
âIf thatâs the actual value, then you and I should cancel our contract.â
âWhy? Are we canceling it?â
âNo, thatâs not what Iâm saying.â
I closed the distance a step and tapped the bottom field.
âHere, 78 percent. Thatâs good.â
âIs this the highest record youâve had with someone?â
âNo. I had an 89 once.â
âWhy didnât you sign a permanent contract with them, then?â
âIsnât that a little too personal? Weâre not that close yet.â
Figuring his insistence came from youth and ignorance of boundaries, I intentionally sounded a little more brusque. But once again, Wonu was a step ahead.
âToo personal? So when can I ask then? After a week?â
âNo, thatâs not the pointâŠâ
Honestly like a child. Contrary to his cold, perfectly handsome looks and low husky voice, his questions were innocent to the point of absurdity. Then again⊠âinnocentâ didnât really fit Wonu no matter what.
âWe just didnât get along. The contract ended, and the personalities clashed too much. His temper was filthy.â
âSo yours wasnât, and only his was filthy?â
Ah. Right to the core.
I answered without irritationâin truth, I wasnât offended.
âWhich is why we fought and broke it off.â
âThat really happens?!â
âOf course. What, you think these contracts are some lifelong marriage vow?â
Now that I knew where his endless stream of naive questions came from, I could forgive it. If heâd never had a partner, then how would he know? People are always astonishingly ignorant of fields outside their own interest.
âWell, with results like this, weâll keep the contract smoothly. Iâll look forward to working with you.â
âMe too, hyung.â
ââŠHyung.â
âShould I not call you that?â
âNo, itâs fine.â
âWhat did your previous partners call you then?â
He seemed strangely fixated on my past. Still, as his first partner, he was bound to be curious about the system.
âThe most common thing I heard?â
âYes.â
âAsshole.â
Then: bastard. Then: rude prick. After that: annoying piece of shit. More neutral ones like âGuide Yang.â There was a reason none of my contracts ever extended.
âIâll just call you hyung.â
âGo ahead.â
âAnd you can call me Wonu.â
âIâd rather not.â
âThen what will you call me?â
âŠAre we really negotiating nicknames?
I gave the only normal, sensible answer.
âHunter Chae, Hunter-nim, Partner Hunter. Iâll probably stick with Hunter-nim.â
âBut then, how will I know if youâre calling me or some other hunter?â
âWeâre usually together. There shouldnât be confusion.â
âWhat about in the field?â
âThen Iâll say Hunter Chae.â
âBut couldnât you just say: Wonu-ya?âÂč
âIs that an order?â
âIf I call it an order, will you do it?â
I nodded. No helping itâformally speaking, his position was higher. Hierarchy sometimes mattered more than character or competence.
âAlright then, I order you. Call me Wonu.â
Creepy, the things he says. Isnât this the part where you laugh and say, âJust call me whateverâs comfortableâ?
ââŠFine.â
âHyung, so youâre not gonna call me that after all.â
âUnless Iâm on the verge of dying, no.â
âYouâre stubborn. Then just call me Hunter Chae.â
I muttered inwardly but nodded. His stubbornness matched my own.
âThen can I step out for a while?â
âWhere to? Iâll come along.â
âIâm going to check on the agency colleague who coughed up blood and splattered the walls red in the matching roomâare you sure you want to come?â
âYeah. Oh, is it into one of those clearance-restricted zones?â
âNo, not that. Do what you want.â
âHyung, you just muttered âDamn, fuck,â didnât you?â
Why ask what you already know?
I ignored him and turned away.
The infirmary was for minor injuries. The wardâfor anything worse. In the lobby you could check how many beds were free, who was occupying them. Every single individual mattered; their whereabouts, their status were critical.
Hyungmin was in the ward. Heâd likely be admitted for a day or two. Crossing the glassed walkway over into the ward building, I discovered Wonu still trailing casually behind me. Iâd half-expected him to give up midway. But he really followed. I couldnât predict him at all; his âcharacterâ defied definition.
âWhere are you going?â
âBuilding B.â
âThen this wayâs faster.â
He yanked me sharply to the right. His strength nearly tore my arm from its socket.
âThe left wing has the freight elevators, but itâs really on the right, isnât it?â
âYes. But if you take the cargo lift on the left, you access Floor F. Itâs quicker that way.â
âYou sure know everything.â
âIâve lived here a long time.â
ââŠ.â
âYou donât want to ask me why?â
âPersonal business.â
I truly didnât care. He wasnât the only one here carrying burdens.
My flat response made him plainly disappointed. Lips pressed into a line, eyes fixed on meâlike a hunting dog with its tail drooping. And me? I was not a dog lover.
âLetâs go?â
Thereâs no way weâd connect. Unless he waved wads of cash like a fan, dabbing his tears with banknotes.
Still, his way was faster. He really seemed to know this place like the back of his hand.
When I opened Hyungminâs ward room, four beds lay inside. But all four were empty. I walked straight over to a bed with a tag displaying patient info and sat down. Wonu just stood watching.
âWhat are you doing? Sit.â
âPretty simple place.â
âItâs not the ICU.â
Maybe heâd only ever been inside intensive care before? Possibly.
Hunters healed fast. If someone ended up in a ward instead of the infirmary, it meant they were injured seriouslyâseriously enough not to go on a dispatch for at least a week. And that was for hunters. If it had been a civilian, itâd have been diagnosed as an eleven- to fourteen-week recovery. No wonder hunters werenât really considered âpeople.â
Wonu randomly pulled every curtain back, then plopped on one of the empty beds, bouncing to make it squeak. Finally, after a while, he came and sat right next to me instead of on another bed.
âThis personâs a Guide too?â
âOf course. Itâs a Guide ward.â
âŠI glanced at the tag on his wristâa cluster of things dangled from it. But I had no intention of asking. I lived by a principle of keeping business and private lives separate. Especially with partnersâthose who stood closest, who by necessity had to be nearâyou drew an even firmer line.
At that momentâjust as I was silently hoping Wonu wouldnât open his mouth with some trivial nonsenseâthe door opened with impeccable timing.
âOh? Hyung!â
It was Hyungmin. He waved his bandaged arm energetically. Outwardly, there were no visible injuries. But his complexion was pale, lips drained white into blue. Beside him hung a stand with not one or two but three IV packs dripping steadily. For this situation, though, that was actually decent.
Guiding rebound wasnât a trivial thing. In the early days, when information was scarce, countless Guides and Huntersâdespite their skillâended up dying from rebound. It was impossible to count the numbers on two hands.
âHyung, hyung! How did you even know I was hospitalized? I swear, I almost died! I mean it, I even saw my grandma who passed away, way off in the distance. I seriously thought my insides were flipping over. I was throwing up blood like crazyâI didnât even know a body could hold that much blood! Iâd be sure it was all gone, but more kept coming, and on top of that, hallucinations and voices wouldnât stop, and the ringing in my ears was insaneââ
Beside me, Wonuâs mouth actually fell open in wonder, before he rested his chin lazily in his palm, eyes keenly fixed on Hyungmin. Clearly, he had never met someone who chattered at such speed before. Before long, Wonuâs leg began to bounce, unconsciously keeping rhythm with the torrent of words.
âAnd thenâget thisâeven when it wasnât pain, even when my mind was fuzzy and fading, my consciousness wouldnât separate from my partnerâs. We stayed tied together. I kept feeling like I was going right while also being dragged left. Hyung! Have you ever had them use the drug that forcibly severs your connection? Itâs like getting whacked with a bat. My skull was pounding like itâd crack open. Oh, ohâand my partner. He was actually really great, butâŠâ
Hyungminâs voice trailed off suddenly.
His expression crumpled. Shoulders sinking, he quietly shifted back onto his bed, the earlier vivacity gone, settling himself wearily into the bedding.
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