AAGULT Ch 2
by berryChapter 2
Except for the strangely generous and gracious boss, there was no one in this organization who liked him. He had already been beaten to the brink of death by the other organization, and getting beaten again now made him feel dizzy, as if he were about to lose consciousness.
âHey. Canât you open your damn eyes properly?â
âAgh, ughâŠâ
Manager Kang roughly yanked Jaehaâs hair, who was slumped in the corner with his head nearly buried in the floor. His ears were ringing from being on the verge of passing out, so it was hard to understand what was being said. But when he barely managed to open his eyes, a fiery pain exploded across his cheek.
Smack!
âI told you not to look at me.â
ââŠâŠâ
Wasnât it you who told me to open my eyes properly beforeâŠ? It felt so unfair, but he knew backtalk would only lead to worse violence. He quickly lowered his gaze halfway and endured it. Seeing this, the manager sighed heavily and let him go.
Even though his body had become somewhat sturdier since manifesting as an Esper, he had a mental-type ability, so it wasnât like he was particularly strong.
âWhatever. You know weâre building a new place in Sector A-5, right?â
âYesâŠâ
âOnce itâs done, youâll be the doorman there. Weâre disguising it, so learn how to be a bartender.â
A bartender? I donât even drink much. The only alcohol I know is beer and soju⊠Also, Iâm not even 20 yet⊠But if I say no here, I might die on the spot. That thought alone made him nod quickly.
âY-Yes.â
âWeâre also setting up a new Guiding facility underground. Your job is to guard the entrance and report if those annoying folks from the Association or the cops show upâget rid of them however you can. If a âguestâ comes, send them downstairs.â
âOkayâŠâ
When he obediently responded, the manager, who had been squatting in front of where Jaeha lay on the floor, stood up. Clicking his tongue in displeasure, he rummaged through his pocket and carelessly tossed an ampoule at him.
â…!â
Afraid that the glass ampoule would shatter upon hitting the ground, Jaeha hastily reached out to catch it. Just stretching his arm made his eyes well up with tearsâhis ribs must have been cracked. But the pain, and even the cold gaze looking at him like he was some kind of insect, didnât matter. The ampoule felt that precious.
âYou call yourself an Esper, huh.â
ââŠâŠâ
Jaeha cradled the ampoule protectively. Seeing this, the manager sneered with a mocking laugh.
Not being an Esper, he couldnât possibly understand how Jaeha felt. Biting back a surge of emotion, Jaeha clenched his lips. He felt like he might start sobbing.
Guides were incredibly rare. For Espers who lived in the shadows, getting a proper Guiding was even harder than it was for regular Espers. Thatâs why taking this kind of drug, which barely suppressed their surging power, or receiving Guiding at illegal facilities, was often their only option. According to the Esper Association of Korea, 98.6% of Korean Espers voluntarily registered. It was because the Association provided Guiding support.
Just like the registered Espers, those in this organization also received Guiding. Since the organization already operated illegal facilities, it wasnât difficult. Plus, an Esper who had received Guiding could use their powers far more efficiently, so there was no reason for the organization not to support it.
ââŠâŠâ
But Jaeha was the only exception.
Nineteen years old and half a year into his manifestation as an Esper, Jaeha had not once received proper Guiding. Just like now, he was occasionally handed drugs that suppressed only the sharpest wavesâlike a handout.
It was the order of the very boss who had personally brought him into this shadowy world.
Jaeha had never questioned that order. That person had saved him several times and was the only one in the organization who seemed to care about him. There had to be a reason. He was our boss, after allâŠ
Only after the manager left did Jaeha slowly lift his body. It felt like he had a thousand-pound stone on top of himâevery joint ached and felt heavy. One side of his face was so swollen from the hit that he couldnât even open one eye properly.
He twisted off the ampouleâs cap and drank it all in one go.
âHaaâŠâ
Only then did the wave that had been ripping through his insides get forced down, subdued and suppressed. It was like trying to compress liquid in a glass with an impossible force, and just like how cracks would spread through the glass, a sharp, dangerous sensation filled his mind.
âUghâŠâ
Once that flimsy peace settled in, nausea hit him. He tensed his stomach tightly and dry-heaved several times. The physical tension amplified his pain so much that he couldnât hold back the tears, and they began to drip down.
âThis is so hardâŠâ
He knew this place was wrong and that he needed to escape as soon as possible. But if he leftâwhat could he even do? He was an orphan, hadnât gone to college, and had nothing but part-time jobs on his rĂ©sumĂ©. There was nothing out there for someone like him.
And letâs be honest.
He didnât have the courage to leave. He had received the bossâs kindness, and he had to repay it. After receiving such overwhelming grace, he couldnât pretend it never happened. And more than that, he couldnât trust that this huge criminal organization had helped him purely out of goodwill without expecting anything in return. Of course, comparing the boss to some common thug was unthinkable, but still⊠that boss, who had always been so kind to himâwas somehowâŠ
Somehow, so terrifying that the thought of leaving scared him to death.
âItâll get betterâŠâ
It would get better eventually. Even when he got scammed and lost his support money, he managed to survive. Even when he found himself saddled with a debt he didnât know about, he still made it through.
He still didnât know why he had manifested as an Esper. His strange, complicated ability didnât suit his personality at allâit didnât help him; it only tormented his mind. But someday, heâd get used to using it. And someday, this sharp conscience stabbing at his heart would wear down and become smooth.
Besides, even though he knew this approach was wrong, his circumstances were still better than those of the Guides working below in the illegal facility.
Humans are selfish like thatâno matter how low they fall, they find comfort in knowing that someone else is suffering more.
âIâm really awful.â
If he kept enduring, maybe a chance to escape would come.
Maybe someday heâd be able to pay for all the wrongs heâd committed, eventually⊠So until then, he just had to hold on.
JustâŠ
Just, my ass.
Seven years had passed since then. He had just recently turned twenty-six, and it had been almost six years since he became the bartender at the bar the organization had set up as a front to hide their illegal guiding facility.
âHey.â
âYes, Chief.â
Once you become a bartender, the thing you do most often isnât mixing drinks but wiping glasses. Now he understood why every bartender portrayed in media held a dry towel and wiped down glasses.
Jaeha, who had been wiping a glass, reflexively looked up at the voice calling him. As a result, their eyes naturally met.
[Still got that annoying face, and even his abilityâs annoying…]
The chief insulted him casually. Since he knew full well that Jaeha could read his thoughts, it was practically just talking behind his back. If this had been back when he wasnât yet used to his abilities, he wouldâve just sweated nervously and gauged the other personâs mood, but Jaeha had grown a lot since then.
âChief, shall I get you a Kahlua milk?â
The chief looked like a stereotypical gangster with his burly build, but he had a pretty weak tolerance for alcohol. He usually had just a light beer or some weak, sweet fruit liquor.
As Jaeha teased him playfully, the chief stopped insulting him. With a wave of his hand as if to say thatâs enough, he met Jaehaâs gaze again.
[The boss?]
âI transferred the money for the ingredients you mentioned. Go buy what you need.â
He brought up the real topic in his mind while speaking a coded line aloud. These days, with the Association cracking down harder, such news felt rather distant to Jaeha, who only worked the door at the bar. Still, thanks to the troublemakers that popped up now and then, it had become routine to talk in encrypted language even during regular times.
âOkay. Iâll leave it in the âstorage.â Thanks, Chief.â
The âstorageâ referred to the illegal guiding facility below. The boss regularly received guiding sessions at the facility underneath this bar.
Though he operated several other illegal guiding facilities with better conditions, for some reason, he had been consistently visiting the A-5 zone facility managed by Jaeha. Jaeha had once overheard the chief muttering that it wasnât safe to keep using the same facility, but he pretended not to know anything, lest the blame fall on him.
âWhen do you think everything will be ready?â
âMm, I think itâll be done soonâŠâ
âIs that so. Let me know when itâs all ready.â
[When itâs all done, report that thereâs trouble in the A-2 zone.]
âOkay.â
Even if something urgent happened in the organization, the bossâs guiding always took precedence, and his decisions were treated as more important. Knowing this, the chief didnât take out his frustration too harshly on Jaeha and turned away. After taking a few steps, he stopped and glared back with wide, sharp eyes.
[Make sure you handle it properly.]
âDonât worry.â
Jaeha grinned and lightly saluted by touching his forehead, which made the chief cringe. It was a little embarrassing, but being bright and playful like this meant he got hit less, so it felt like the right move.
âTsk.â
The chief clicked his tongue and walked out of the bar, setting off the bell on the door. Only after the chief had fully disappeared did Jaeha release his tense posture and let out a long sigh.
âHaaâŠâ
Why did the boss keep coming here⊠He grumbled inwardly, even though it wasnât the bossâs fault.
There were quite a few people in the organization who didnât like him, and that was scary. Still, when the boss didnât come for guiding, working as a bartender felt more like living as an ordinary person, which he liked.
âŠOf course, occasionally, unregistered Espers would show up trying to use the guiding facility below⊠And every time that happened, heâd be scared to death⊠He even teared up once or twiceâŠ
âŠAnyway, after sending the chief off, Jaeha resumed his work. He wiped the water-stained glasses with a dry towel. After finishing with the many glasses and just as he was about to check the ice, the barâs phone rang.
ââŠâŠâ
Perfect timing. Without hesitation, he answered the phone.