HMN C23
by berryChapter 23
Wiping his forehead roughly with the back of his hand, Daeyoung slowly pushed the cart toward the eel restaurant. Asking one of the employees outside about the bossâs whereabouts, he received a quick gesture inward.
âThe owner of the local specialty shop said he borrowed your storage, right? Where exactly is that?â
âAh, this? Itâs just down thereânot far.â
From the very back of the restaurant, the middle-aged owner appeared, swaying on his feet. He was already half-drunk, his face and neck flushed red. Patting his rounded belly, he fished for something in his pocket as he talked.
âI run this place, and that one down the alley thereâthe dried fish pub, and the frozen pork belly joint at the corner, too. My son-in-law came by for a drink, and thenâŠâ
âOh⊠really?â
As they walked together down the narrow alley, the man kept chatting between hiccups, proudly introducing himself. But none of it really registered in Daeyoungâs ears. The cart he was dragging rattled heavily behind him, far too laden and awkward for one person alone. The storage was at the back of a building far down the laneâbehind the business district, away from the fair stalls.
âThereâs a basement here. I use it for my restaurantâs suppliesâitâs clean. Here, take the key, hardworking student.â
Patting his shoulder encouragement, the boss whistled his way back up the alley. Daeyoung looked up at the old brick storefront before leaning to peer down the basement steps.
âWow⊠how am I supposed to get all this down there?â
Naturally, a small, aging building like this wouldnât have an elevator. Canât I just leave it aside and sell it tomorrow? The weather was still cool enoughâitâd be fine, wouldnât it?
Though it was only late afternoon, the descending stairway already looked dark and sunless. Clicking his tongue, Daeyoung steeled his resolve.
âLetâs go.â
He decided to move one box at a time. Ideally, he wouldâve stacked two or three, but if he fell even once, heâd end up paying for all the broken stockâa loss he couldnât afford. Grunting under the weight, Daeyoung carried one box down the steps and took out the key.
âHuh⊠this really doesnât fit right.â
Creak, creak.
The ancient metal handle resisted, and the key scraped and slipped inside. After a few attempts, twisting and jiggling, it finally caught and turned. With both hands, he pulled; the heavy steel door groaned open at last.
âJeezâŠâ
Contrary to his doubts about such an old building, the basement was surprisingly neat. The owner hadnât exaggeratedâstacked boxes lined the walls in tidy rows, all long-lasting goods, clearly organized for storage. The air was cooler than outside, exactly as intended.
âGood. Letâs move fast and get some rest.â
Maybe, if he finished early, he could even take a short break. Propping one box against the doorway so the heavy door wouldnât keep swinging shut, he climbed the stairs again.
Thud.
âAh! Damn, this is hard work!â
By the third trip, his legs gave out. He collapsed onto a step, panting. The stone stairs were steep, the boxes heavy, and the endless up-and-down grind was brutal. Just five minutes, he decided. Leaning his head back against the wall, he felt sweat cooling on his skin, only for heat to rise all over again.
Everything hurtâlegs, back, shouldersâbut worst of all was his wrist. It had been through strain for days, but todayâs abuse had it grinding like a rusted screw every time he tried to rotate it.
He thought about checking his phone to pass the time, only to remember heâd shoved it into his bag back on the truck to lighten his load. Too tired to fetch it, he sighed.
âThought youâd run off, but here you are, hiding.â
Startled at the voice, Daeyoung whipped his head around. Of all people, it had to be him. Just when he thought the chatterbox had finally left, Go Chiwoo appeared again. Instead of relief at the extra help, Daeyoung felt only the creeping dread of what trouble this guy would stir now.
âHowâd you even know I was here?â
âMy eyesightâs good.â
He couldâve just said heâd seen him walk this way, but of course he had to squeeze in self-flattery. Daeyoung had thought heâd met all kinds during his all-boys high school years, but this was a whole new species. Suppressing a sigh, he stood upâtoo drained to argue.
âMove.â
Go Chiwoo still unsettled him. Not that thereâd ever been a time he didnât, but ever since their last conversation at the cafĂ©âespecially so.
âThatâs what we call delusions of self-importance.â
âYou think everyoneâs talking about you, donât you? Like youâre all they ever notice.â
Every word he spoke seemed designed to grate. Flicking his hand impatiently, Daeyoung brushed past him toward the stacked boxes.
âIf youâve satisfied yourself that Iâm not slacking, then leave. You were plenty chatty before.â
âYou think I enjoy being here? Canât you see how this place disgusts me?â
Rather than forcing small talk or lifting anything, apparently even standing near heavy labor was suffering for this self-proclaimed prince.
âDidnât notice.â
Daeyoung muttered lazily without even meeting his gaze. From above, Go Chiwoo watched him workâthose messy clothes, the streaks of sweat on his temples, the white gleam of his forehead where his hair had fallen back.
Every volunteer gig probably looked like this, but something about this guyâthis oneâwas different.
Out there, most volunteers half-heartedly shuffled boxes, pretending effort while gossiping or sneaking breaks. But this one? Hopelessly earnest. His forearms, slender and taped with patches, twisted as he lifted. Even beneath his gloves, Daeyoungâs fingers flashed with medical tape or plasters, layered where the skin mustâve split. Not strong, not builtâjust stubborn.
An irritating type. What recognition did he expect from all this needless effort? Egotistical, neurotic, spooked by rumors and whispers, twitching at phantom judgmentâand yet, mindlessly devoted to work no one noticed.
âWhat are you doing?â
As Go Chiwoo hefted two boxes, Daeyoung paused mid-step up the stairs.
âThought Iâd help. Youâll brag later that you did it all yourself. Where do these go?â
Even his offers of help sounded arrogant. Scowling up at the annoyingly graceful face, Daeyoung pointed below.
ââŠInside, youâll see where Iâve stacked the rest.â
Stillâthe guyâs height had its uses. Carrying two boxes at once, Chiwoo looked annoyingly stable. Daeyoung tried the same and gave up at half the weight. Fine. Iâll stick to humble worker bee.
Thunk.
Before long, the last few boxes from the cart were piled neatly inside the basement. Go Chiwoo placed the final oneâtaken from the door where Daeyoung had propped itâand stood behind him. Daeyoung stayed crouched, fiddling with the floor.
âWhat now?â
Setting down what he carried, Chiwoo followed his gaze.
âThisâone of the boxes tore open when I put it down. Something fell out.â
Judging by the sticky puddle spreading nearby, whatever had been inside was shattered. He sighed, dragging it aside so it wouldnât soak the rest. A sweet, fruity smell filled the air. Mustâve been fruit syrupâor liquor, maybe some homebrew specialty. Heâd wondered why that particular box had been so heavy.
âGot anything to wipe this with?â
While Daeyoung looked around, Chiwooâs eyes scanned the crown of his headâthe soft hair clinging slightly with sweatâand then slid lower, tracing the nape of his neck. Pale. Too pale. Heâd even done military service; how could someone stay this white? Had he grown up under a roof his whole life? Impossible.
Daeyoung found a roll of paper towels and crouched to mop the mess. The damp air stirred, carrying the faint scent of himâsoap, detergent, something clean beneath the warehouseâs thick smell of dust and metal. Chiwoo frowned without knowing why. The contradiction clawed at him.
Warehouses always smelledâof decay, concrete, and rustâbut here, that sharp note of him sliced through everything. A purity out of place. The irritation of it tightened in Chiwooâs chest, making his throat twitch as he realized Daeyoung was now crouched literally at his feet.
âGo Chiwoo.â
ââŠâŠâ
Even when his name was called, Chiwoo didnât answer. Am I just⊠thirsty? He blinked. Realization hit, and with an irritable breath he looked down.
âIâm not asking you to help, but could you at least move your feet? Go if youâre done.â
ââŠI was about to.â
Casting a glance at the puddle ending at his toes, Chiwoo turned crisply on his heel. Daeyoung rolled his eyes at the pompous movement.
âWhat is this evenâplum wine, maybe?â
The label on the box said only Local Specialty Gift Set and was sealed too tightly to read the bottle. After wiping the floor dry, Daeyoung straightened, figuring heâd have to explain the damage to the owner later.
Clack. Clack.
Gathering up the paper towels, he glanced toward the door. Chiwoo was jiggling the handle. It had stuck earlier, and Daeyoung had suspected the prince wouldnât manage it. Sure enough, the man turned with a frown.
âIt wonât open.â
ââŠâŠâ
Of course not.
Striding over, Daeyoung tossed his trash aside and motioned for him to step aside.
âRight, right. Let the servant do it. Iâll open it, Your Highness.â
With mocking flourish, he gripped the handle and twisted firmly, shoving the door forward.
Thump.
Thunk.
ââŠWhat the hell?â
The door didnât budge. Frowning, he braced his shoulder and shoved repeatedly, the handle rattling but refusing to turn. Only his arm burned with the effort.
âHuh? Thatâs weird.â
Heâd struggled opening it before, but never this badly. Back then at least it had felt like it might give; now it was locked solid, fused into place. A chill crept up his spine.