Jae-won stood frozen in the doorway.
Inside smelled like leather and the ghost of expensive perfume—something with gardenia and something darker, maybe sandalwood. The woman in the backseat was not what he expected. She was forty-three. He knew because he'd spent an hour searching for her after the first message, finding nothing but a shell company registered to a Park Hae-sook, a name so common it was a brick wall.
He almost laughed. Willing. As if any of this was about willingness and not survival. Exit 10 was a wind tunnel. Autumn in Seoul always smelled like burnt leaves and the metallic tang of diesel. Jae-won wore a black sweater—no logos, no holes—and his one pair of decent boots. He arrived at 2:51 PM. Early. Hungry. He hadn't eaten since a convenience store triangle kimbap the morning before.
"You're taller than your photos," she said. "That's good. Liars bore me."
She smiled. It didn't reach her eyes. "Company. Sometimes more. Sometimes just the sound of another person breathing in the same room. I'm a busy woman. I don't have time for romance, and I have no patience for men who pretend they want anything other than what you want."
He went upstairs.
The text message arrived at 2:47 AM, right as Jae-won was about to delete the app for good.
He remembered the date because it was the day his mother was discharged from the hospital. He'd gone to pick her up, taken her to a small gimbap restaurant near the station, watched her eat for the first time without a feeding tube. When he returned to Hannam-dong, his phone had twelve missed calls. All from Hae-sook.
Jae-won stood frozen in the doorway.
Inside smelled like leather and the ghost of expensive perfume—something with gardenia and something darker, maybe sandalwood. The woman in the backseat was not what he expected. She was forty-three. He knew because he'd spent an hour searching for her after the first message, finding nothing but a shell company registered to a Park Hae-sook, a name so common it was a brick wall.
He almost laughed. Willing. As if any of this was about willingness and not survival. Exit 10 was a wind tunnel. Autumn in Seoul always smelled like burnt leaves and the metallic tang of diesel. Jae-won wore a black sweater—no logos, no holes—and his one pair of decent boots. He arrived at 2:51 PM. Early. Hungry. He hadn't eaten since a convenience store triangle kimbap the morning before. -18 - Condition Mom - Sugar Mom -2018- Korean E...
"You're taller than your photos," she said. "That's good. Liars bore me."
She smiled. It didn't reach her eyes. "Company. Sometimes more. Sometimes just the sound of another person breathing in the same room. I'm a busy woman. I don't have time for romance, and I have no patience for men who pretend they want anything other than what you want." Jae-won stood frozen in the doorway
He went upstairs.
The text message arrived at 2:47 AM, right as Jae-won was about to delete the app for good. She was forty-three
He remembered the date because it was the day his mother was discharged from the hospital. He'd gone to pick her up, taken her to a small gimbap restaurant near the station, watched her eat for the first time without a feeding tube. When he returned to Hannam-dong, his phone had twelve missed calls. All from Hae-sook.