The problem was, I had no idea how I was supposed to do it.
I had to go to some building in Core 3 by 8:30 p.m. When I checked, it was pretty far from the factory site. Meaning they werenât going to give me a factory tour right away.
So that meant I had to go there and use the honey trap(?) to get a factory access pass.
And of course, Iâd never used a honey trap in my life.
Faced with a crisis Iâd never even imagined, I spent the entire morning clutching my head.
âWhat am I supposed to wear?â
I had absolutely zero talent for dressing myself up.
âWhat... how do I even prepare for this?â
Igor, whoâd been chugging a sports drink, lifted an eyebrow.
I looked at the man with short black hair and dark black eyes.
Silence settled as we faced each other.
I turned my head away.
âYeah. My bad for asking the guy who washes his hair with soap.â
âWhat?â
Igor set the sports drink down, his voice incredulous.
âWhat the hell does soap have to do with anything?â
âLeonard.â
The senior sitting beside Igor, leisurely sipping coffee, lifted his head.
He smiled gently, wearing a grin that made him look like the nicest guy in the world.
âWith a face like yours, I think all you need is to dress appropriately for the time and place.â
âThen Iâll buy a suit nearby after lunch and go.â
âThatâs not a bad idea.â
âAnd then what?â
Honestly, Iâd rather tie them up, dump water over them, and get what I wanted that way.
Or Iâd rather sit a politician down and negotiate both sidesâ positions. I could more or less tell what that person wanted from me, and I could bargain accordingly.
But a honey trap?
Human charm?
âJust go and smile, Hilde. Donât make it so hard. Listen to them and smile.â
Leonard bared teeth so neat he ought to be in a dental commercial.
âCompliment them. And if youâre confident, toss in a small joke.â
If Ricardo were here, at least I couldâve gone dressed properly....
âAsk questions. Look at them like theyâre telling you the most interesting story in the world.â
Ju is the expert in this field, but I didnât particularly want to ask him....
âAnd if they want a kiss, kiss them.â
âExcuse me?â
Kiss what?
âI have to kiss them, too?â
When I blurted it out in a blank voice, Leonardâs eyes went round.
He looked like he genuinely couldnât understand why I was so shocked.
Igor plucked a single pale-green grape off the shine muscat cluster sitting on the round table where we were seated.
âWhatâs with you over a kiss?â
âDo you have some kind of germophobia?â
Igor popped the shine muscat into his mouth as he spoke, and Leonard asked in a tone like, Ah, so you hadnât even considered that.
I glared at the men across from me.
âNo. I just believe anything beyond a kiss should be with someone I have feelings for.â
Leonardâs eyes went even wider.
His face screamed, What kind of idiot says that? It was obvious he was thinking it. The rationality heâd acquired to function in society seemed to be stopping him from turning that thought into sound.
âWhy?â
the senior asked.
Before I could answer, he shaped his mouth into a small âahâ and added,
âI didnât tell you this. The young chairmanâs wife is quite a beauty too. The two of them are famous as a perfect handsome man and beautiful woman pair. They say every time the couple shows up at social gatherings, people turn their heads to stare.â
âItâs not about their looks. Given the situation, I can smile and compliment them, at least, but....â
âYouâre not desperate enough.â
Igor lifted the shine muscat cluster and curled his lip into a crooked grin.
âYouâre still the sameâgetting all blocked up in the weirdest places. Youâre better than most people when it comes to skinship like hugging, so whatâs the big deal?â
âThatâs a sign of closeness and affection. The kind of âkissâ weâre talking about here wonât be that.â
âDo you think theyâre expecting true love from you? Theyâre both pros. Itâs just, âWe like it, so letâs have fun.â Whatâs the problem between grown adults?â
âThen you go.â
It wasnât something I spat out because I was sulkingâI genuinely thought heâd do better than me.
âOr how about we go together, and you use the honey trap?â
The two men stared at me.
Eyes wide, they didnât look away.
I had enough sense to realize the thing Iâd just said sounded extremely bizarre to them.
The one who broke the silence was Leonard.
âDo your people have different standards for beauty than we do?â
âSenior.â
There was no malice in his voice, which somehow made it crueler.
I hurriedly adjusted my posture and said,
âIgor is handsome too.â
âHeâs just overly generous about other peopleâs faces.â
Igor looked at Leonard with a face that wasnât hurt at all.
âHeâs the kind of guy who always says everyone has their own charm. So when he told you to use a honey trap, he probably meant it. Iâm not dissatisfied with my face, but I also know itâs not the level where I can pull a honey trap. Hildebert doesnât know that.â
âHow strange. Even if I donât know societyâs common sense, I can still tell whoâs handsome and whoâs pretty.â
Leonardâs reply had been oddly off the mark for a while now.
It was so bizarrely off that it was hard to even point out what was wrong.
But it definitely seemed more off than Yun. The only reason Yun had gained anything resembling normalcy was probably Yehyeon and Amiâs tearful efforts at correction. When Yun was in front of Yehyeon or Ami, sometimes he even looked like a normal person.
âHilde. Who do you think is the most handsome and the prettiest among the Badgers?â
While I was having this weird experience of realizing Yunâs ânormalcy,â Leonard looked at me and asked.
I pressed my lips into a straight line.
âI donât want to answer a rude question.â
âIs that a rude question?â
So he really didnât know.
âYes.â
âWhy? The only Badgers here are you and me. And Iâm not so lacking in self-awareness that Iâd be offended if I didnât rank.â
âArbitrarily ranking other people is generally not the right thing to do, senior. Especially in a field that has no objective indicators.â
âReally? Then Iâll remove the word âmost.ââ
I let out a small laugh.
No matter how much I explained, he wouldnât understand.
So I decided I might as well just answer.
âAide-de-Camp Ska and Senior Lia.â
âHm. If you answered like that, your eyes seem normal.â
âCommander. If you canât kiss, then at least smile your ass off.â
Igor tossed the shine muscat stemâevery grape goneâonto the plate with a thunk.
âAnd do the thing where you pull the woman in and push the man away. Then the jobâll be basically solved.â
Wasnât he making it sound a little too easy because it wasnât his problem?
âAnd tie your hair back into one ponytail when you go, and then let it down at the right moment.â
âWhen is the right moment?â
I didnât get an answer that was clear enough to satisfy me.
All I got were lines like, What have you even been doing for two hundred years? and, Yeah, someone born with it canât help but get lazy, none of which helped me cultivate a honey trap in the slightest.
But the appointment was already set, and I couldnât just throw this plan into the trash.
I wished evening would never come.
But evening came.
Heavy with dread, I set off for the meeting place.
***
âWalk me in.â
At the main gate, I turned back to Igor.
My subordinateâwhoâd been playing at being my escort knightâtook in my desperate face and snorted.
âItâs been a long time since Iâve seen you that scared, Commander. Didnât you attend social gatherings just fine?â
âI still attend social gatherings just fine! Iâm scared Iâm going to turn everything into a total disaster.â
âTrust your face.â
Igor turned his head away indifferently and rolled up the passenger-side window.
âGood luck.â
He was a cold bastard. After telling me to contact him when it was over, he left me behind and disappeared. The vehicle heâd borrowed from Sylvia quickly shrank into the distance.
With my options gone, I dragged my heavy feet into the building.
It looked like a place where Byung Yeong-baek or a baron mightâve lived. Iâd been to Choi Hyunjunâs house, so I thought Iâd gotten used to these palace-like homes, but the one Iâd been invited to was far bigger than Choi Hyunjunâs mansion. No matter where I looked, I could feel the coupleâs staggering wealth.
But I didnât have the energy to admire the chandelier filling the reception room ceiling or the Persian rug covering the marble floor.
When I stood there blankly, someone approached and guided me into the reception room.
âPlease wait just a moment.â
Inside were two pairs of men and women.
A faint smell of marijuana hung in the air. Wine and cocktail scents mixed with the perfume the people in the room had sprayed on their bodies.
âWow!â
The owners of that perfume greeted me far too enthusiastically.
âArenât you the amusement park Badger?â
This part wasnât that hard.
I sat where they offered me and gave appropriately measured answers to the barrage of questions.
Guiding the topic gently in the direction I wanted was easy. They were drugged, and they bore me no ill will. And I was curious about the chairman and his wife.
I matched their tone, tossed out a topic, and they bit the bait immediately.
The guests snickered as they spilled crude gossip.
âThe wifeâs the pitiful one. Looks like she married him because she was dazzled by his looks.â
âShe tied her own noose.â
âDidnât she know the rumors?â
âNo way she was that stupid!â
âWell, itâs been an open secret for ages that Heath prefers men. She probably just didnât want to admit it. Or maybe no one ever told her.â
âPoor thing.â
Across from the men laughing derisively, a blonde woman put on a fake, tearful face.
âUnrequited love! And sheâs an adopted daughter, too!â
âHey, she was adopted into a rich family. She probably grew up happier than we did. That kind of rich doesnât need our pity.â
âBut she looked like she grew up being mistreated. Didnât you see it? That timid expression.â
A chic woman with a sharp bob put a cigarette to her lips and tilted her head.
âAlways looking scared of everything. Itâs not an easy face for a rich familyâs daughter to have.â
âThey say the husband is ice-cold to her. Apparently he treats his own wife like that.â
âThatâs too much. He signed the marriage contract after calculating his own benefits, too. If you married for business reasons, is there really a need to be that cruel?â
âI heard the wife broke the contract and went to see her husbandâs lover. Thatâs when Heath completely lost it.â
âWow, scary. So the legally married one went to find them?â
Vulgar.
I thought that, but I didnât let it show on my face.
I wasnât particularly surprised. Iâd seen this countless timesâat the Empireâs social gatherings, at Earthâs social gatherings. People like this existed in every world, in every era. It wasnât new or interesting.
What was surprising was the information Iâd just gained.
The chairmanâs wife genuinely loved him?
Then was the rumor about her aggressively pulling in handsome men just false gossip?
âBut lately thereâs been talk that Lacyâs been drawing men in left and right. Decent-looking ones, too.â
âFor that, she didnât look very happy.â
âI think thatâs part of a jealousy strategy.â
The man idly spun his cocktail glass as he spoke.
âSheâs trying to make Heath look back at her.â
âShe still hasnât given up? Sheâs persistent. Heath is handsome, sure, but Lacyâs not hard on the eyes either.â
âWell. For the men she calls over, thereâs nothing bad about it.â
The man whoâd been examining a wine label said that, then suddenly snapped his head toward me.
I calmly met the gaze of the person curling the corner of his mouth at me.
Dilated pupils, loose with drugs.
The man grinned and asked,
âSo which side is the amusement park hero aiming for? Heath? Or Lacy?â
At that moment, a young housemaid entered the reception room.
âMr. Taleb. The chairman is calling for you.â
I stood without hesitation and left the reception room.
***
There was some distance to the second reception room where the chairman and his wife were waiting.
I knew things like this all too well. Malicious rumors. Political marriages. Vast mansions. The servants who worked there.
The way people unjustly smeared clung to their masters.
I wasnât surprised when the young housemaid walking ahead of me spoke quietly.
If anything, I was surprised by how long sheâd held it in.
Sheâd looked like she wanted to speak from the moment she pulled me out.
âI know itâs presumptuous of me to speak.â
Thatâs how it usually starts.
âLacy is not that kind of person.â
I heard a very different account.
The gist was this: it was true that Lacy loved Heath, but she had never once gone to his lover to commit any wrongdoing. In fact, Heathâs lover had been abusing the servants when Heath wasnât around. Unable to stand it, Lacy had sought him out privately to warn himâonly for the lover to run straight to Heath and frame Lacy.
Lacy was kinder to the servants than anyone, and the men who visited her were all business partners. Many had fallen for her, but Lacy had always rejected their advances....
That was the story I heard.
I couldnât yet be certain what was true.
But judging from the rumors as a whole, it did seem true that Lacy liked Heath.
âChairman.â
A honey trap wouldnât work on the wife at all.
I thought that as I heard the knock on the oak door.
This was bad. That meant Iâd have no choice but to deploy the honey trap on Heath.
I wasnât confident.
âMr. Taleb is here.â
âLet him in.â
A voice as cold as Yunâsâif not colderâflowed out.
Creeeak....
I forced myself not to sigh as I stepped through the opening door.
Blindingly bright lights.
I came face to face with the pharmaceutical company chairman sitting in a modern reception room.
A perfectly fitted three-piece suit. Pomaded hair slicked neatly back. A high nose bridge and sharply defined brow. The watch on his wrist reflected the lightâit was from the same company Erich Erhart favoredâand the fountain pen in his hand bore the logo of the brand Colton preferred.
He was unmistakably handsome. I could see why Leonard had called him a handsome man. He had an impression as cold as Yunâs. But while Yun was cleanly handsome, this man was intensely handsome.
And his eyesâunlike Yunâsâwere normal.
A blessing in disguise.
âSit.â
The man didnât rise from his seat.
He flicked his chin toward the sofa opposite him and spoke dully, eyes still on his documents.
âThis is my wife.â
I turned my gaze to Lacy.
Focused on confirming the primary target, Iâd momentarily forgotten her presence. They werenât seated side by side, so she hadnât entered my field of view right away.
Still, they were the ones whoâd emailed me and called me here. What an incredible way to treat a guest.
No matter how little he liked his wife.
This really was excessive, just like the rumors said....
.......
...?
âNice to meet you.â
The woman smiled faintly.
I couldnât respond.
Rose.
Why are you there.
âIâm Lacy Clair.â
âI donât recall telling you to introduce yourself before me.â
Without lifting his gaze from the documents, Heath snapped at her.
LacyâRose pretending to be Lacyâflinched, then hurriedly lowered her eyes at an angle.
Heath let out an impatient sigh.
Behind us, the servant quietly sucked in a breath.
Just before closing the door, the housemaid muttered under â NĐŸvĐ”lÎčght â (Read the full story) her breath,
âOur poor Lady Lacy....â
No.
Fuck.
Youâre all being completely fooled.