Divorce Contract C6
by berryChapter 6
Rough with forced theatrics, Go Daesikâs voice trembled with feigned tears. From that moment on, Go Igyeol could not even reply. He clamped his lips shut. Whether or not he had ever been âloved,â it was undeniable that Daesik had spent the money Igyeolâs marriage brought himâso he had no defense.
âPut it on speaker.â
ââŠWhat?â
âIâm speaking to him now.â
âI⊠I can handle thisââ
The whisper, desperate to take responsibility, dissolved helplessly. Blinking rapidly, Igyeol lowered the phone and tapped the screen, switching to speaker mode. Instantly, Daesikâs lament rang out loudly through the car.
âFather, this is Seo Dohyeon.â
â âI ought to die⊠eh? Director Seo?â
The voice that had been wrung into sobs shifted instantly to one of forced excitement. At the sudden change, chills spread along Igyeolâs spine. And what outrageous demand would come this time? He already knew without needing to hear. Shame flushed from his collarbone up to his pale neck. Dohyeon cast him a brief glance, then spoke smoothly as if rehearsed.
âIâll be sending someone to your home tomorrow. Go shopping. Donât skimp on Igyeolâs accountâchoose whatever you like best.â
â âEh? Sending someone? You shouldnât trouble yourself. Goodness⊠my son-in-law! Our son-in-law! I knew I was blessed in this lifetime. Director Seo of SJ Group himself, my son-in-law through marriage to our Igyeol, telling me to fit myself properly. Itâs too much kindnessâdoesnât need to be! Truly amazingââ
Suddenly, the quiet surroundings filled with noise. Boastful, swaggering tones carried with miserable clarity. He mustâve already rushed to some crowded place just to announce his connection. Exhibiting his greatest skillâexaggeration and empty boastingâDaesik practically shouted his good fortune. Igyeol squeezed his eyes shut, praying desperately that he wouldnât make trouble.
âIf your friends have a practice range they go to, sign up there too. Weâll go on a round together someday.â
â âHeh, a beginner like me compared to you, Director Seo! Anyway, I only said a few words out of frustration with our Igyeol. Poor child, maybe heâs fragile. I hope he wasnât too hurt.â
âDonât concern yourself. Iâll handle him.â
â âYesâyes, Iâd be grateful.â
âGood night.â
Without waiting for Daesikâs reply, Dohyeon cut the call.
âYou couldâve just agreed, but why were you fumbling so badly?â
ââŠâŠâ
âAre you burdened because itâs my money? Whatever you spend, itâs nothing to me. Pocket change.â
ââŠThank you.â
At last, Igyeol managed a faint word of gratitude. Dohyeon only nodded, unsatisfied. It was gallingâeven in debt and humiliation, he still thought it was Igyeol who owed thanks. With a tired sigh, he unfastened another shirt button and turned the wheel.
They traveled long in silence. The place they ended up was one Igyeol rememberedâone of the few restaurants where he could finish nearly all his meal: a Korean-style fine dining house, mild flavors, quiet rooms.
âOut.â
He undid his seat belt and glanced toward Dohyeon circling to the passenger side. Before Dohyeon could reach the handle, Igyeol pushed the door open himself. For a moment, the man looked faintly affronted, but he said nothing.
âThis coatââ
âWear it. You dressed too lightly today.â
âBut you shouldââ
When Igyeol draped it over his arm instead of his shoulders, Dohyeonâs sharp gaze froze him until he hastily slipped back into the coat. The gravel crunched softly beneath their feet as he followed behind.
Guided by the manager, they entered a private room away from the main hall. Beyond the polished glass, a small garden greeted them with early springâs buds glowing light green upon low branches.
Though they hadnât reserved, the table looked as though waiting for them. Dishes arrived one by oneâseasoned greens, braised short ribs, three kinds of kimchi, dried banchan. Finally, a bubbling stew thick with perilla seed broth.
âEat.â
âIâll eat well. Please, you eat too.â
âShould I order more?â
âNo⊠this is already plenty.â
Igyeol carefully picked mild dishes first. But when he raised a spoonful of rice to his lips, nausea flutteredâreading his bodyâs betrayal. Before Dohyeon could notice, he gulped it down with water, chewing nothing. Dish after dish remained nearly untouched, in sharp contrast to the emptying bowls across the table.
âI recall you ate well here before. Am I mistaken?â
âNo, itâs delicious. Iâm eating plenty.â
âHnh.â
Dohyeonâs long fingers pressed roughly against his own temple. His cold eyes, reopening slowly, cut across to Igyeol.
âDonât be difficult.â
ââŠâŠâ
âDivorce can only happen when I decide. Not before.â
He dropped his spoon, rose, and walked out. Only then did Igyeol release his taut breath. His unease wasnât over the manâs temper, but over the food threatening to drag up bile before his eyes. Hastily, he closed the lids, swallowed down another gulp of water, and wiped his damp lips.
Gathering Dohyeonâs coat, he thought againâit must be because the rut cycle was near. His growing irritability, his insistence on keeping Igyeol constantly within sight. Yes, it had to be.
ââŠWhat do I do.â
Dohyeonâs ruts were long, unyielding. Was it all dominants, or just him? Even with suppressant injections, his heat never abated quickly. With a worried expression, Igyeol rose and followed.
In the familiar corridor, through the quiet entrance, he saw Dohyeon waiting outside, leaning against the car, eyes cold as blades.
âGet in.â
âIâŠ.â
âWhat.â
ââŠIs it⊠your rutâ?â
Words tangled in his throat. But before he could form them properly, Dohyeonâs lips tugged upward.
âThey say even a mutt can recite poetry after three years at a Confucian school. Looks like after two years of marriage, you can tell by my rut cycle too. Yes. Today was bad. I took leave.â
ââŠHow long⊠how many daysâŠ?â
âUntil it subsides, of course.â
The calm voice carried weight enough to suffocate. If it was just beginning, then at least a weekâor longerâwhere heâd be bound to Dohyeon. He closed his mouth, not daring to ask if they were headed home.
As scenery blurred by outside the window, a long-harbored thought slipped out before he could stop himself.
ââŠIâve wonderedâwhy isnât a child part of the terms?â
âWhat?â
âHaving a child might make succession easier. Your grandfather would speed up preparations to hand over the company.â
âOh, that.â
Leaning on the window, brow creased from a shallow headache, Dohyeon answered.
âI thought itâd be too pitiful. Being born from nothing but desire and necessity. Andâif I wanted a child, it wouldnât be with you. Itâd be with someone else. The stronger the genes, the better.â
The blunt answer made Igyeol nod. At last, it was clear. Divorce wouldnât happen until Dohyeon said so.
âDid that upset you?â
âNo. It makes sense. If I were you, Iâd want children with a dominant omega, not a recessive like me.â
âYou understand well. You will never be the one to bear my child.â
Yesâif he stayed, Dohyeon would never let him have the baby. A man who said only superior traits mattered would never want the child of a recessive omega. Heâd have to leave before it showed. Somewhere Dohyeon couldnât reach.
The instant they stepped into the house, Dohyeon seized him. Coat still on, shoes still tight, Igyeol was yanked deeper inside. His pheromones poured uncontrollably, overwhelmingâspilling, cascading, drowning the air.
âW-waitâat least let me washââ
âI donât have the patience tonight.â
âAhâ!â
Even the words were cut off by the press of a mouth. Pheromones rained over him, layer upon layer smeared until they were all he could taste and breathe. A small mouth pried open, the rough edges of Dohyeonâs hunger invading, every heated surface smeared with his scent.
âUnhâhhkâhaa.â
âOpen wider. Tongue out.â
When Igyeol timidly extended it, Dohyeon caught it at once, dragging it inside. Between his teeth, sharp edges nipped it mercilessly. Whimpers spilled like broken air against his lips. By the time he let go, Igyeolâs tongue was cut, the whole inside of his mouth brimming with salt and iron.