This story illustrates that trust and vulnerability are essential components of meaningful relationships, and that individuals often need to overcome their own protective barriers to form genuine connections. The protagonist, an omega with psychometry abilities who has spent years isolating himself due to his power to read others' emotions through touch, learns to trust four alpha CEOs who have demonstrated genuine care for his son. The narrative emphasizes that building trust requires mutual honesty, patience, and the willingness to be vulnerable despite past experiences of betrayal.
Approfondir
Prérequis
- Pas de données disponibles.
Prochaines étapes
- Pas de données disponibles.
Approfondir
Omega Waiter Hid His Pup During His Shift — Four Alpha CEOs Held the pup and never let him goAjouté :
My name is Yoon Jaya and I have exactly three rules I never break. Rule one, never let anyone touch me without permission. Not because I am rude, because I am a psychometrist and skin contact is basically an unwanted movie screening of someone's worst memories playing directly into my skull.
Strangers grief, rage, shame, all of it dumped into my head the second their fingers brush mine. It is exhausting. It is invasive. It is the reason I own 17 pairs of gloves and zero close friends.
Rule two, never bring my son to work.
Shin Daeon is eight months old, perfectly round-cheeked, and deeply unaware that his existence is the most reckless thing I have ever allowed myself. He is also the only person whose touch does not send visions screaming through my brain, just warmth, just him.
So naturally I would rather eat glass than put him anywhere near the chaos of a restaurant shift.
Rule three, never under any circumstances set foot inside anything owned by the Haeyan Group. Today I am breaking all three. It is 5:47 in the morning in Incheon and the city outside my window looks like it has not decided whether to be beautiful or miserable yet. Gray sky, pale light, the Han River adjacent fog that rolls through this part of the coast and makes everything feel underwater. I am standing in my kitchen in my work uniform, one apron string still untied, holding down against my chest while my phone shows me a bank balance that I genuinely thought was a typo the first time I saw it. It was not a typo. Park Sunyi, my neighbor and the only person I trusted to watch Daeon during my shifts, called me 40 minutes ago sobbing. Her mother had a fall. She was already at the hospital in Seoul. She was sorry, she was so sorry, she would make it up to me. I told her not to worry. I hung up. Then I stood in the middle of my kitchen and used every single curse word I know, which for the record is quite a few. I cannot call in sick. Last month I used my only grace absence when Daeon had a fever that climbed so high I sat on the bathroom floor with him in a lukewarm tub at 2:00 in the morning, talking to him like he could understand me telling him he was not allowed to scare me like that ever again. The restaurant's policy is two absences before termination. I have used both. So, here we are. Don blinks up at me from the crook of my arm, completely unbothered, one fist wrapped around the collar of my uniform shirt. He looks like he is judging me. Honestly, fair.
"I know," I tell him. "I hate this, too." He blows a bubble in response. The restaurant I work at is called Chung Wa.
It sits on the upper floor of one of those sleek glass towers near Incheon's business district. The kind of building that reflects clouds and makes regular people feel underdressed just walking past.
It is a private dining establishment, reservation only. The kind of place where a single table costs more than my monthly rent, and the napkins are folded into shapes I still cannot identify after 11 months of working there. It is owned by the Haeyan Group. Specifically, it is owned by four men who collectively make up the executive board of Haeyan Group, one of the largest private investment conglomerates in South Korea.
I know their names the way anyone who works in this building knows them.
Carefully and from a safe distance. Kwon Si-woo Jin, chief executive, 29. The kind of man people describe as a closed room, no expression, no warmth, no visible pulse. Oh Min-hyuk, chief financial officer, 28. Reportedly charming in meetings and completely unreadable outside of them. Lim Tae-woo, chief operating officer, 29. Loud in the press, quiet in person, which somehow makes him more unsettling. Jang Hyun-woo, chief strategy officer, 27.
The youngest, rumored to be the most dangerous, which considering the company he keeps is genuinely saying something.
I have spent 11 months successfully avoiding all four of them. They dine on the private floor occasionally. I work the main floor. Our worlds do not intersect. I have kept it that way on purpose because I know what happens when I accidentally brush skin with someone powerful. I see things I cannot unsee. I carry weight that is not mine, and men like that always have the heaviest weight of all. But today I have no options left. So, at 6:15 in the morning, I walk through Chung Wa staff entrance with my 8-month-old son tucked inside my oversized jacket, my psychometry gloves on both hands, and the specific expression of a man who is committed to a terrible decision and is seeing it through anyway. The storage room on the east corridor is small, warm, and almost never used before the lunch rush. I have noticed it before the way I notice everything in a building I spend most of my life inside. I spread a clean tablecloth across the floor, layer it with the padded insert from Deion's bag, and set him down gently. He looks around the small space with enormous curious eyes. "One shift," I whisper, pressing my forehead to his. "Six hours.
I will check on you every hour. You sleep, I work, nobody finds out, and we both survive this." Deion grabs my nose.
I take that as agreement. I straighten up, tie my apron properly, and walk out onto the floor. I make it exactly 2 hours and 19 minutes before everything goes wrong. The lunch prep rush hits Chung Wa like a wave, and I ride it the way I always do, moving fast, keeping my gloves on, balancing four plates on one arm while mentally calculating exactly how many minutes until my next check on Deion. The main floor is filling up, reservations stacking. My section alone has three tables of corporate types who all want their water refilled before the glass is even half empty. I am fine.
Everything is fine. I am a professional.
At 8:22, I slip away from the floor for exactly 4 minutes, check the storage room, find Deion still asleep with his fist pressed against his cheek, and return to the floor before my section manager notices the gap. Perfect.
Flawless. I deserve an award. At 9:40, I check again. Still asleep. Still perfect. Still the most beautiful and cooperative human being I have ever produced. At 10:31, I push open the storage room door, and the tablecloth is there. The padded insert is there.
Deion's little stuffed rabbit is there.
Deion is not there. The floor tilts. Not literally, but my body does that thing where my brain sends a signal and my legs simply refuse to process it. So, I stand in the doorway of an empty storage room staring at a Dayon-shaped absence on the floor and I do not move for approximately 3 full seconds. Then instinct kicks in. I do not scream.
Screaming means attention. Attention means questions. Questions mean the kind of conversation that ends with me unemployed and my son in the arms of a social worker. So, instead I close the storage room door quietly behind me and begin moving through the corridor with the calm expression of someone who is absolutely not coming apart at the seams. I check behind the dry goods shelving, nothing. I check the narrow alcove near the staff lockers, nothing.
I check the linen closet at the end of the east hall, which requires me to smile at a passing line cook like I am simply a man who enjoys examining tablecloths on a Tuesday morning, nothing. My chest is doing something I do not appreciate. It feels like someone reached inside and started ringing it like a wet cloth. I keep moving, keep my face neutral, keep my gloves on because the last thing I need right now on top of everything else is to accidentally brush someone's wrist and get a vision of their childhood trauma. That is when I see it. At the far end of the service corridor, there is a door I have spent 11 months pretending does not exist. It is unmarked, matte black, the kind of door that does not appear on the staff hour orientation map because whoever designed the orientation map was sending a very clear message about who belongs on the other side of it. It leads to the private lower level, the executive floor, the restricted area that exists specifically for the four men whose names I know carefully and from a safe distance. The door is slightly open. A thin line of warm light cuts across the corridor floor like an accusation. My hands are shaking. I notice this the way I notice everything unpleasant, with irritation and full awareness and absolutely no ability to stop it. I press one gloved palm flat against the wall and breathe for exactly 2 seconds.
My son crawled through that door or someone carried him through it. Neither option is acceptable. I push the door open and step through. The staircase on the other side is warmer than the corridor, quieter, too. The kind of quiet that feels intentional rather than empty. The air shifts immediately, and I feel it before I understand it. Alpha pheromone, layered and complex, not aggressive but undeniably present, the kind that settles into the room like expensive furniture. Heavy, deliberate, more than one source. My omega biology does what it always does in the presence of strong alpha pheromone.
It sits up straight and pays attention like a student who was half asleep until the teacher said something interesting.
I tell my biology to mind its business.
It ignores me. I descend the stairs. The door at the bottom is open wider than the one above. Light spills through it, warm and golden, and from inside I hear something that stops me completely on the third step from the bottom. Deion laughing, not crying, not distressed, laughing. That round, breathless, full-body baby laugh that he usually reserves for when I make ridiculous faces at him during bath time. I step through the door. There are four men in the room. Four men. Each one of them is the kind of person who makes the air rearrange itself when they enter a space. Broad shoulders, sharp jawlines, the particular posture of people who have never once in their adult lives had to wonder if they belong somewhere.
Kwang Seo-jun is holding my son.
Deion has both fists wrapped in the fabric of his undoubtedly expensive shirt and is laughing like this is the best day of his entire 8-month life. All four of them look up at me at exactly the same moment. The silence that follows is the loudest thing I have ever heard. I count four heartbeats. Mine is the loudest and also the most embarrassing. I straighten my spine, lift my chin, and do what any reasonable person would do when they walk into a room full of the most powerful alphas in Incheon and find one of them holding their infant son like it is a completely normal Tuesday morning activity. I say, "That is my baby." Kwang Seo-jun looks at me. His eyes are the particular shade of dark that makes it genuinely difficult to tell what he is thinking, which I suspect is entirely on purpose.
He looks down at Daeon. He looks back at me.
His expression does not change even slightly. We know, he says. Great, I say. So, you will understand why I need him back immediately. Nobody moves. I want to be clear. I am not afraid. I am a 23-year-old omega waiter standing in a room with four alpha CEOs who collectively own the building I am standing in, and I am not afraid. I am furious, which is different and honestly more useful. Oh, Min-hyuk is the first one to actually smile. He is sitting on the edge of the conference table with his arms crossed, and he has the kind of face that probably gets him out of trouble constantly open and warm and just disarming enough to make you forget he is worth more money than some small countries. He wandered down the stairs, Min-hyuk says. The door must not have latched properly. Seo-jun found him sitting outside in the corridor just looking around like he owned the place.
I look at Daeon. Daeon looks back at me with enormous innocent eyes and then grabs Seo-jun's collar again and tries to put it in his mouth. Daeon, I say.
Daeon ignores me completely, this child.
Lim Tae-woo is standing near the window with his jacket off and his sleeves rolled up, and he is watching the entire situation with the expression of someone genuinely entertained. He is taller than I expected from a distance. Most things about this room are larger and more overwhelming than I expected from a distance. You hit him in the storage room, Tae-woo says. It is not a question. I don't know what you're talking about, I say. Third shelf from the bottom has formula residue on it, says Jang Yun-woo from the corner of the room where he has been so quiet I genuinely forgot he was there. He is younger than the others, but his eyes are the kind of sharp that makes you feel like he is already finished reading you and moved on to the footnotes. Also, your apron pocket has a pacifier in it.
I look down at my apron pocket. The pacifier is absolutely visible. That could be anyone's pacifier, I say.
Min-jun makes a sound that is almost a laugh. Tae-woo does not bother hiding his. Seo-jun just keeps looking at me with that unreadable expression, and I resist the very strong urge to take one glove off and touch his wrist just to find out what is actually happening behind those eyes. I resist it because I am a professional and also because I genuinely cannot handle any more information today.
"Your Eun-jae has Seo-jun says, 'Main floor, 11 months. No complaints on record.'" The fact that he knows that should probably frighten me more than it does.
"And your Kwon Seo-jun," I say pleasantly, "chief executive, 29. The kind of man people describe as a closed room, which frankly tracks based on the last 90 seconds." The temperature in the room shifts.
Tae-woo actually laughs out loud at that, a real one, surprised out of him.
Min-jun's smile widens into something genuine. Hyun-woo looks up from whatever he was reading with the closest thing to interest I have seen on his face yet.
Seo-jun blinks once. "You're not scared," he says. "I'm furious," I clarify, "which is different." Dae-on chooses this exact moment to make a very enthusiastic sound and reach both arms out toward Seo-jun's face. Seo-jun, the most feared executive in Haeyan Group, the man whose name people lower their voices around, goes very still. Then, with the careful, deliberate movement of someone handling something genuinely precious, he adjusts his hold so Dae-on does not topple forward. Something cracks open in my chest without my permission. I close it immediately.
"I'll take him now," I say, "and my voice comes out steadier than I feel.
And I understand if this is a terminable offense. I had no child care and I couldn't call in sick. I made a bad call. I own it. But whatever happens to my job, I need my son back first." I cross the room. I hold out my gloved hands. Seo-jun looks at me for a long moment. Then he looks at Dae-on. Then he does something I am completely unprepared for. He says, "Sit down, Eun-jae." Not [clears throat] unkindly.
Not cruelly. The way someone says it when they have already made a decision and are simply waiting for you to catch up. Nobody is firing you today. I sit down. Not because Kwan Seo-jun told me to. I want to be very clear about that.
I sit down because my legs have been running on adrenaline and sheer stubbornness since 5:47 this morning and they have filed a formal complaint that I can no longer ignore. The chair I land in is softer than anything I have ever owned. Of course it is.
Everything in this room is the kind of quality that makes you suddenly very aware of how worn your uniform is. Daeun is still in Seo-jun's arms. He has now successfully transferred a significant amount of drool onto what I can only assume is a shirt that costs more than my rent. Seo-jun has not reacted to this. He is looking at Daeun with an expression I cannot quite name because it does not match anything I expected from him. It is not irritation. It is not inconvenience. It is something quieter than that. Something that sits uncomfortably close to recognition. I do not have time to think about what that means because Min-jun slides off the conference table and crouches in front of me with his elbows on his knees and his head tilted at an angle that is somehow both disarming and deeply suspicious. "When did you last eat something?" he asks. "That is not relevant." I say. "Your hands are shaking." he says. I look at my hands.
They are in fact shaking which is irritating because I told them not to. I press them flat against my thighs. "I'm cold." I say. "It's 24° in this room."
Hyunwoo says from the corner without looking up. I turn to look at him. "Are you always this helpful?"
"Yes." he says completely serious.
Taewoo is already moving toward a side cabinet along the wall. He opens it, pulls out a bottle of water and a small plate of something that looks like it was prepared for an actual meeting, sets both on the table in front of me and steps back without making a production out of it. I stare at the food. My stomach makes a sound I will be taking to my grave.
"Eat." Taewoo says simply. He does not hover. He does not watch me the way people watch Omegas when they want to feel superior about helping. He just moves back to the window and looks out at the Incheon skyline like he is giving me privacy, which is a strange thing to feel grateful for, but here we are. I pick up the water. I drink half of it. I eat two of the small rice crackers on the plate and pretend I am not close to inhaling all of them. Daeon makes a pleased sound and Seojun shifts him slightly, and I watch my son settle against this man's chest like he has been doing it for years. The sight of it does something complicated to my insides that I refuse to examine right now or possibly ever. His scent is unsteady, Seojun says. He is still looking at Daeon. His voice is low enough that it feels like he is not quite talking to me. More like noting something he cannot stop himself from noting.
My grip tightens around the water bottle.
"He's fine," I say. "I didn't say he wasn't," Seojun replies. He looks up then and his eyes meet mine directly. "I said his scent is unsteady. That's a different thing." I know it is a different thing. I have known it for months. Daeon is an omega pup without a stable alpha presence, and his scent has been fluctuating in ways that his pediatrician mentioned quietly during our last visit, using careful professional language that translated roughly to this will get harder as he gets older. I smiled and nodded and cried in the car afterward, and have not let myself think about it too directly since then, because thinking about it directly means admitting I cannot fix it alone. I am not admitting that in front of four alpha CEOs I met 11 minutes ago.
"He has me," I say, and I mean it to come out firm. It does, mostly. Seojun holds my gaze for a moment longer than is strictly comfortable. He does not argue. He does not push. He simply looks at me the way people look at something they intend to return to later. I do not like it. I also cannot look away.
Minhyuk straightens up from his crouch, and the energy in the room shifts back towards something lighter. He has that quality, I notice, of being able to adjust the room's temperature without anyone quite seeing how. "Okay," he says, looking between all of us like he is chairing the world's strangest meeting. Here is what happens now. Jaeha finishes his shift. Dan stays down here where it's quiet and someone can watch him. Nobody on the main floor finds out.
I don't need I start. It's not charity, Taewoo says from the window, still not turning around. It's logistics. You work better when you're not panicking. The restaurant runs better when you work properly. It's a practical decision. I open my mouth. I close it. The worst part is that he is completely right and I genuinely hate that. Hyunwoo finally looks up from his papers and meets my eyes across the room. For someone who has said approximately 12 words, his expression carries an entire conversation in it. Something that looks almost like understanding. Wrapped in the careful distance of someone who is very good at not showing what he actually feels. One shift, he says quietly. That's all this is. Except when I look at Daeon laughing in Seojun's arms, something in my chest tells me that is the first lie any of them have told me today. I go back upstairs. I re-tie my apron, fix my expression into something professional and unbothered.
And walk back onto the main floor like I did not just spend the last 20 minutes in a restricted executive room discovering that my infant son has apparently adopted four of the most powerful men in Incheon without consulting me first.
The lunch rush swallows me whole and I let it. Tables fill, orders stack. I move through my section with the particular efficiency of someone who has been doing this long enough that his body runs on autopilot while his brain does something else entirely. Right now his brain is doing inventory. Four alphas, one baby. Zero logical explanations for why any of this feels as settled as it does. I check on Daeon at the one-hour mark. I take the back stairs, slip through the unmarked door, and find the executive room transformed in a way I was not prepared for.
Someone, and based on the precision I suspect Hyunwoo, has moved the conference chairs to create a clear floor space. Daeon is on his padded insert from the diaper bag on his stomach doing the aggressive wiggling that passes for crawling in his current skill set. Taewoo is sitting on the floor approximately 2 ft away with his jacket folded beside him and his sleeves still rolled up, holding a pen horizontally just out of Daeon's reach like he is running a very serious developmental exercise. Daeon is furious about the pen. He wants it desperately.
He is wiggling with his entire body toward it. I stand in the doorway for 3 full seconds. Taewoo looks up, sees me and says nothing. He just nods once like everything is normal. Like he sits on expensive floors dangling pens for other people's babies every day. He likes things he cannot have, Taewoo says, determined. He gets that from me, I say.
Something moves through Taewoo's expression. Not quite a smile, but close enough that my chest does the annoying thing again. I check Daeon's temperature, fix his socks, and go back upstairs. The second check reveals Minhyuk sitting cross-legged on the floor reading something out loud from his phone in a voice clearly designed to be soothing. Daeon is asleep on his chest. Minhyuk looks up at me with absolutely zero embarrassment and simply mouths the words, "He crashed fast." I take a photo with my eyes because no camera could capture how surreal this is and go back upstairs.
The third check is where everything goes sideways. I come down the stairs and the room is quieter than before. Seojun is at the conference table with his laptop open.
Hyunwoo is beside him with documents spread between them. Daeon is in the portable seat I brought in the diaper bag awake and content. And the room smells like four different alpha signatures overlapping in a way that should feel overwhelming, but instead feels like something I do not have a clean word for, settled. It feels settled. I am so distracted by that feeling that I do not notice the document on the edge of the table until I reach past Hyunwoo to check Daeon's blanket, and my gloved hand catches the corner of a folder and knocks it to the floor.
I pick it up without thinking. The glove on my right hand has a small tear at the thumb. I noticed it this morning and told myself it did not matter. It matters now because the second my bare phone makes contact with the folder surface, the vision hits me like cold water directly to the face. It is fast.
Psychometry always is with objects.
Flashes, not films, a boardroom, voices raised, Hyun-woo younger standing across a table from a man I do not recognize.
His jaw tight, and his hands flat on the surface. The words are muffled the way they always are in object readings, but the emotion is not. Fear, not his own.
Someone else's fear pressing into him from across the table. And beneath that, buried under layers of control so practiced it has become architectural, something that aches in a way that has nothing to do with business. Grief, old and specific and carefully contained. It lasts 2 seconds. I surface from it already handing the folder back with my expression completely neutral. Because I have had 23 years of practice at pretending I did not just see something I was never supposed to see. Hyun-woo takes the folder. His fingers do not touch mine, but he goes very still. He looks at my hand, at the torn glove, at my face. His eyes are the most precise thing about him, and right now they are reading me the way I just read that folder, layer by layer, looking for something specific. "You felt something," he says, very quiet, not a question. My heart does one hard knock against my ribs. "I dropped the folder," I say. "I picked it up. That's all."
Hyun-woo looks at me for a long moment.
The grief I felt in the vision is completely invisible on his face now, packed away behind all that careful architecture.
But I know it is there. I know exactly where he keeps it. "Your glove is torn," he says. "I noticed," I say. "You should replace it," he says. "I know," I say.
We look at each other across approximately 18 in of charged silence while Seo-jun types and Daehyun blows bubbles, and neither of us says the thing that is actually happening. Then Hyun-woo looks back down at his documents, and I go back upstairs with the specific feeling of someone who has just accidentally learned a secret that is going to cost them something significant. The afternoon shift bleeds into early evening, and Chung-gil transforms the way it always does after 4:00. The lighting drops softer. The music shifts lower. The clientele changes from corporate lunch crowds to the kind of dinner guests who arrive in cars with tinted windows and never look directly at the staff. I work through it all. I am good at this. Moving through a room full of people and remaining invisible is practically a secondary superpower at this point.
But something is different tonight, and I feel it before I can name it. It starts with the looks, not from the guests, from the staff. By all, the senior server who has worked at Chung-gil for 6 years and knows everything that happens in this building approximately 40 minutes before it actually happens, catches my eye near the service station and gives Billy a look I cannot immediately decode. It sits somewhere between sympathy and warning and something that looks an uncomfortably like pity.
"What?" I ask. "Nothing," she says, and walks away too quickly. Then Jun-ho from the kitchen finds a reason to pass through my section twice in 20 minutes, which he never does, and both times he looks at me like he is waiting for something to happen. I do not like this.
I do not like being looked at like I'm about to become a story someone tells later. At 5:48 I slip downstairs for what I tell myself is my last check before the end of my shift. I push open the executive room door and stop. All four of them are there. That is not new.
What is new is the energy in the room.
The laptops are closed. The documents are put away. Min-yook is standing.
Tae-woo has his arms crossed. Hyun-woo is looking at the wall. Se-jun is holding Don again, which my son clearly considers his natural right at this point. And they are all looking at me with the coordinated expression of men who have made a decision. I have seen that expression before. It never precedes good news. "Whatever this is," I say, "I want it stated for the record that I did not agree to it." "We want to offer you a contract," Se-jun says. I blink. A what? A formal employment restructure, Hyun-woo says. And he has a document open on the table in front of him that was absolutely not there 20 minutes ago. Enhanced hours, stable salary, a private child care arrangement within the building during your shifts, and full benefits coverage.
I look at the document. I look at Daeon.
I look at the four of them. Why, I say?
Because the current arrangement is inefficient, Taewoo says. You hid your son in a storage room, Minhyuk adds, not unkindly. That cannot happen again. Not because of the rule, because he could have been hurt. Something about the way he says it, quietly and without any performance of authority, lands directly in the center of my chest. I cross my arms. So, this is about liability. No, Seojun says, just that. No explanation attached, no qualifiers. Just the word delivered with the particular certainty of someone who has not said an imprecise thing in years. I look at him. He looks back at me. Daeon grabs his collar. You don't know me, I say. You didn't know I existed this morning. We know enough, Minhyuk says. That is not reassuring, I tell him. It's not meant to be reassuring, Hyunwoo says from the side.
It's meant to be accurate. I stand there in the middle of this room that smells like four different alpha signatures, and something that my traitorous omega instincts keep categorizing as safe, and I try very hard to think clearly. My psychometry has given me things I never asked for. I know there is grief in Hyunwoo that he has built his entire personality around containing. I know from the way Taewoo moves around Daeon, careful and deliberate and slightly too practiced, that he has been around children before in a way that left a mark. I know from the way Minhyuk watches me when he thinks I am not looking that his warmth is not performance. It is the thing he leads with because the alternative costs too much. And Seojun, who I have not touched and cannot read, and who is therefore the most unsettling of all four, holds my son like Dawn is something worth being careful with. That last part is the one I cannot argue against, no matter how hard I try. I need to think about it, I say. Of course, Seojun says.
I'm not agreeing to anything tonight.
We're not asking you to." Min-jun says.
"And if I say no, my current position stays exactly as it is. No consequences." "Yes." Taewoo says. I look at all four of them one more time.
Then I look at Daeon, who looks back at me with his enormous calm eyes, and then looks at Seojoong, and then looks back at me with an expression that I can only describe as pointed. "He already likes you." I say, mostly to myself. "We know." Min-jun says, and he is smiling now, warm and real. The feeling is mutual. I pick up my bag from the chair.
I take Don from Seojoong's arms, and the transfer happens slowly enough that for exactly 2 seconds, Seojoong's hand overlaps with mine through my glove, and I feel nothing because the fabric is between us, and I am grateful, and also somehow disappointed, which is information I will be ignoring indefinitely. "I'll let you know." I say. I walk out. I make it to the staircase before my legs remember they are tired, and my heart remembers it is full, and I stand on the third step from the bottom and breathe for a moment with Don pressed against my chest. "What are we doing?" I whisper to him. He pats my face with one open hand, gentle, certain, like he already knows the answer and is waiting for me to catch up. Hey, if this story is pulling you in, and you want to know what Jaeha decides, what secret Hyunwoo is hiding, and what these four alphas actually want, make sure you subscribe and hit the bell so you never miss what happens next. Things are about to get a lot more complicated. Stay with us. I take the long way home, not because I am lost, because I need the 20 minutes of cold engine air between that building and my apartment to do something useful with everything currently happening inside my chest. Daeon is bundled against me in his carrier, face tucked warm against my collarbone, already half asleep.
I walk along the waterfront road where the harbor lights reflect off the water in long broken streaks, and I have an argument with myself that goes roughly as follows. Accepting their offer is logical. The money is better. The stability is better. The child care arrangement alone would solve the problem that broke all three of my rules this morning.
Logical, practical, obvious. Accepting their offer is also the most dangerous thing I could do, and I know it in my bones the way I know everything important, not through reason, but through sensation.
Four alpha signatures. Four men who looked at my son like he was already something to them.
Four sets of eyes that followed me in ways I felt on my skin even through a crowded room.
Getting closer to that is not logical.
Getting closer to that is how people like me end up with feelings they cannot afford. I have been alone for 2 years, since before Dae-hyun, since the person who was supposed to stay decided that an omega with uncontrollable psychometry and a habit of knowing too much was more exhausting than he wanted to deal with.
He was not wrong. He was also not kind about it, and I packed both of those things into a box in the back of my chest and got on with surviving, which I am very good at. What I am not good at is this, whatever this is. I am still arguing with myself when I turn onto my street and find someone standing outside my building. I stop walking. He is tall, lean, dressed well enough that he looks wrong against the backdrop of my ordinary neighborhood block. He is not one of the four. I would know. I have memorized all four without meaning to, the way you memorize anything that requires careful navigation.
This man is someone else entirely, and the way he is standing, still and deliberate, with his eyes already on me before I turn the corner, tells me he was not here by accident. I keep my face neutral. I shift Dae-hyun slightly in the carrier so the man cannot see his face clearly. "Eun Jae-ha," the man says, not a question. "Depends on who's asking," I say. He smiles. It does not reach anything above his mouth. "I represent certain parties with an interest in Haeyan Group. I heard you had an interesting in day." My blood goes cold. I do not let it show. "I'm a waiter," I say. "My interesting days involve soup spills. You spent several hours in the private executive level today," he says, "with all four of them.
That's It's a soup spill." I say nothing. Saying nothing is underrated as a strategy. He takes one step forward and I take one step back and he stops reading the movement correctly. His eyes drop briefly to the carrier. Today on sleeping form. Cute kid, he says. Every protective instinct I own fires at once.
My hands curl. My jaw tightens. I keep my voice completely level because losing my composure in front of this man would be the worst thing I could do right now.
It's late, I say, and you're outside my home. So, I'm going to go inside now and you're going to leave. And whatever message you came to deliver, you can consider it not received. Something shifts in his expression. Surprise, maybe. He expected something softer. The four of them are not what they appear, he says. Before you make any decisions, you should know what you're walking into.
Good night, I say. I walk past him to my building door. My key is already in my hand because I am not an idiot and I have spent 23 years learning to be ready. I get the door open. I get inside. I get it closed behind me. Then I stand in my building stairwell with my back against the door and my heart slamming against my ribs and Deion sleeping peacefully against my chest, completely unaware that the world just shifted. Again, my torn glove. I never replaced it. I pull it off without thinking and press my bare palm flat against the door behind me. The vision comes instantly. This door, tonight, earlier. The man outside with his phone to his ear, his voice low. And the name he says into it, clear as anything even through the muffled filter of psychometry. Kwon Sae-hyun. Not said like an enemy's name. Said like a handler's name. Like a report being filed. The vision drops away and I am back in my stairwell and the cold that moves through me has nothing to do with temperature. He was sent here. The man outside was sent to test me, to see what I would say, to measure how close I had gotten to four men who apparently have watchers I did not know about. And one of those four men might be the reason the watcher came at all. I look down at Deion. He opens his eyes at exactly that moment, looks up at me and reaches one hand toward my face the way he always does when he senses I need grounding. "I know." I whisper.
My voice cracks slightly at the edge. "I know. Because I came home tonight already half decided, already leaning toward yes. And now I do not know what I am leaning toward at all. I do not sleep. I try." I put Deion down in his crib, change into something that is not a work uniform, make tea I do not drink, and sit on my kitchen floor with my back against the cabinet and my bare hands in my lap because I am too tired to find a replacement glove and too wired to care.
The vision plays on repeat whether I want it to or not. The man outside, the phone, Kwang Seo-jun's name in someone else's mouth like a code word, like a reference point, like something being reported back. Here is what I know about psychometry that most people do not understand. It does not show me truth.
It shows me impression. The emotional residue of a moment filtered through the object that witnessed it. Which means what I saw was real, but what it means requires something psychometry cannot give me. Context. I need context. And there is exactly one way to get it. I am at Cheongwadae by 7:00 the next morning 1 hour before my shift starts. With Deion in his carrier, my best gloves on, and the specific expression I wear when I have made a decision I am not entirely comfortable with but I'm committing to anyway.
The staff entrance guard sees me and does a visible double take. "You're early." he says. "Observant." I say. "Is the executive level occupied?" He hesitates exactly long enough to tell me the answer is yes.
"Tell Kwang Seo-jun that Yun Jae-ha is here." I say. "And that I have a question that cannot wait." Seo-jun meets me in the corridor outside the executive room, not inside. The corridor, which tells me he is being careful about something, giving me space or giving himself distance. I cannot tell which yet. He is in a dark shirt, no jacket, which means he has been here since before business hours. His eyes go to Deion first, then to my face. And whatever he reads there makes him go very still. "You're not here about the contract." he says. "No," I say. "Who was the man outside my apartment last night?" Not a flicker, not a breath. His expression does not move, and that stillness tells me everything and nothing simultaneously. "What man?" he says. "Do not do that," I say quietly.
"I am standing here giving you the chance to tell me the truth. Please do not waste it by performing ignorance. It is beneath you, and it will make me leave." Something shifts. It is small, a fraction of movement around his jaw, the kind of micro-expression that psychometry has trained me to catch in people long before I ever touch them.
"He works for my family," Seo-Jun says.
The words land flat and heavy. "Your family sent someone to my home," I say.
"My family sent someone to assess a potential security risk," he says.
"Someone with access to the executive level who appeared without vetting. That is standard protocol." "I am a waiter," I say, "with a baby."
"I know that," he says, and for the first time since I have met him, something beneath the architecture of his control shows itself. Not much, just enough. "I didn't send him, Jae-ha. I found out last night after you left. I spent 3 hours on the phone making sure it does not happen again." I study his face. I am very good at reading faces. I have been doing it without the aid of psychometry my entire life, because sometimes the most important information lives in the spaces between what people say. He is telling the truth. I know it the way I know everything true, not through proof, but through the particular quality of stillness that surrounds an honest thing.
"Your family monitors your building," I say. "My family monitors everything connected to Haein Group," he says.
"That is something you deserve to know before you make any decision about the contract." I shift Dae-on in the carrier. He is awake and looking at Seo-Jun with the focused intensity he reserves for things he finds deeply interesting. "And the others?" I say.
"Min-hyuk, Tae-woo, Hyun-woo. Are they being monitored, too?" "Yes," Seo-Jun says. "Are they safe?" I say. "From your family, from whoever sends men to people's apartments at night." He looks at me for a long moment. We protect each other. We have for a long time.
Something in the way he says it opens a door I was not expecting. Not romance, something older than that. Four men who built something together because the alternative was surviving alone, and I recognize that structure because I built the same one, smaller, just me and Daeon, but the same bones underneath. I exhale slowly. If I sign that contract, I say, "I need one thing." "Name it," he says. "Honesty," I say. "Not full disclosure of every business secret.
want that. But if something affects me or my son, I need to know it. No managed information, no protective lying. Just the truth, even when it's inconvenient."
Seojun is quiet for a moment. Then he extends his hand out to shake, palm up, open. An offering rather than a demand, and the deliberateness of it tells me he knows about my gloves. He has noticed, and he is asking rather than taking. I look at his open hand. I look at his face. I pull off my right glove. I place my hand in his. The vision comes soft and immediate, nothing like the cold shock of the door last night. This is warm. A memory pressed into his skin like something he carries constantly. A younger Seojun, maybe 20, sitting alone in a room full of people and feeling the particular specific loneliness of someone who has never once been chosen for himself, rather than for what he represents. It lasts one breath. I surface to find him watching me with full knowledge of what just happened.
"You felt something," he says. "Quiet, like Hyunwoo said it yesterday, but different. Without defense." "Yes," I say. I do not let go of his hand. "Was it enough?" he says. I think about the man outside my building. I think about Daeon laughing in four different sets of arms. I think about grief and Hyunwoo and gentleness and Taewoo and warmth and Minhyuk and loneliness in the man standing in front of me right now holding my hand like he is waiting for a verdict he has already decided to accept either way. "Almost," I say. And then I hear footsteps on the staircase behind Seojun, and the door opens and the other three walk through it. Because of course they do, and Min-jun sees our joined hands and says absolutely. Nothing but his entire face does something enormous and quiet. And Tae-woo looks at the ceiling briefly like he is composing himself. And Hyun-woo looks directly at me with those precise eyes and says simply you came back. I had a question I say. Did you get your answer he says. I look at all four of them. I look at Daeon who has both arms stretched toward the room full of alphas with the enthusiasm of someone who made his decision eight hours ago and has been waiting for me to catch up ever since.
I'm getting there I say. Min-jun is the first one to move. He crosses the corridor in three easy steps and holds his hands out toward Daeon with a natural confidence of someone who has already done this a hundred times today even though it has been less than 24 hours. Daeon lunges toward him with full body enthusiasm and absolutely no sense of self-preservation which is extremely his personality. Careful I say automatically. I have him Min-jun says and he does securely and warmly and without any of the awkward tentativeness of someone unfamiliar with babies.
He settles Daeon against his side and Daeon immediately grabs his collar. And Min-jun looks down at him with an expression so unguarded it almost hurts to look at directly. I still have my bare hand in Seo-jun's. I notice this at the same moment he does. He does not pull away neither do I. We both simply acknowledge it the way you acknowledge something that has already been decided without a meeting being called about it.
I let go first. Not because I want to because I need both hands for what I am about to say. I want to tell you something I say looking at all four of them before I give you my answer cuz honesty goes both ways and I just asked for yours so you deserve mine. Nobody speaks. The corridor is quiet enough that I can hear the building breathe. My psychometry is not subtle I say. I read people through touch. Not always not everything but enough. Emotional residue memories the things people press into objects and skin without knowing they are doing it.
I have been wearing gloves since I was 7 years old because I learned very early that knowing too much about strangers makes it very hard to be around them. I look at Han-wool. I read the folder yesterday. I felt your grief.
I did not choose to and I would not have chosen to. Han-wool's expression does not collapse, but something behind it shifts like a door opening 1 in after years of being sealed. He nods once, small and precise and real. I know, he says quietly. I figured it out last night. I read the door of my building, I tell them.
That is how I knew about the man your family sent, Seo-jun. It was not a guess. Seo-jun nods. He already knew this, too. I can see it in the absence of surprise on his face. And I read your hand just now, I say to him directly. I felt what it is like to be you at 20 years old in a room full of people who only see what you represent. I am not going to pretend I did not feel that.
The silence that follows is the soft kind, not empty, full of things being carefully set down. Tae-woo is the one who speaks next. His voice is low and even and carries the particular weight of someone choosing words the way a surgeon chooses instruments.
Does it change things? He asks. Knowing what you know about us? I think about that honestly because he deserves honesty. It changes how scared I am, I say. Which means it makes things harder, not easier, because I can feel that you mean it, all four of you. And that is significantly more terrifying than if you didn't. Min-hyuk makes a soft sound that is almost a laugh. Dae-on pats his face in response. We are not asking you for everything at once, Min-hyuk says, pressing a gentle kiss to the top of Dae-on's head so naturally that my breath catches. We are asking you for a chance. That is all. A chance at what exactly? I say because I need to hear it said clearly. Tae-woo steps forward, not crowding, just closing the distance enough that I have to look up slightly to meet his eyes. Up close, he is less intimidating than his public reputation and more something else entirely, careful and warm and carrying something in his expression that my psychometry does not need bare skin to read. At this, he says simply, gesturing between all of us, "Whatever this already is." I look at Seojun. He is watching me with that unreadable expression that I now know is not coldness, but concentration.
The face of someone paying full attention. "You said De-Anh needs a stable alpha presence," I say to him.
"He does," Seojun says. "And you think four is better than one," I say. The corner of his mouth moves. It is the smallest, almost smile I have ever seen, and somehow it undoes more of my careful architecture than anything else that has happened today.
"We think four is what we have," he says, "and we are not willing to offer less than that." I look at my son.
De-Anh is curled against Min-jun's chest now, one fist around his collar, eyes heavy and drifting towards sleep with the total confidence of a person who has never once doubted he is exactly where he belongs. His scent is steady, warm.
The fluctuation that has been worrying me for months is quiet for the first time, smoothed out by the four alpha signatures surrounding him like a held breath finally released.
He is not afraid. He has never been afraid of them. Not for a single moment since the first time he opened his eyes in that executive room and decided, with the absolute certainty of someone eight months old and unburdened by self-protection, that these were his people.
My son, who cannot speak, who cannot argue, who cannot overthink or second-guess or build walls around himself, looked at four strangers and simply knew. Maybe I should trust that.
Maybe I should trust him. I put my glove back on. I straighten my apron. I look at all four of them one last time, and I take the kind of breath that precedes the kind of decision that changes the shape of your life.
"I have three conditions," I say.
Min-jun grins. Tae-woo's shoulders drop with something that looks like relief.
Hyun-woo closes his eyes for exactly one second and opens them again. Seojun simply waits, patient and certain, like he never considered any other outcome.
"Name," Seojun says. "Honesty, always.
Even when it is inconvenient. Even when you think you are protecting me. I can handle hard things. What I cannot handle is being managed. "Agreed." Seojun says.
"Nobody touches my son without his comfort in mind. Pack bond or no pack bond, he is not a package deal without his say. When he is old enough to have a say, he gets it." "Agreed." Taewoo says, and his voice is rough with something that takes me a moment to identify as respect. "And the third?" Minhyuk asks, eyes bright. I look at him. "Then at all of them. Go slow." I say. "I have spent 2 years surviving on my own and I am good at it. I do not need rescuing. I need something I have not had in a long time and I am going to need time to remember how to let myself have it. So, go slow and do not mistake patience for reluctance."
The corridor is very quiet. Then Hyunwoo, who has said the fewest words of any of them across 2 days and somehow meant the most with every single one, steps forward. He stops within reach. He does not touch me. He looks at me with those precise, careful eyes and says, "We have been waiting a long time for someone worth going slow for." Something breaks open in my chest, not painfully, the way a window breaks open in a room that needed air. I laugh, actually laugh, surprised out of me, and it sounds strange in my own ears because I have not done it without performing it for so long that the real version feels like something borrowed from an earlier version of myself. Minhyuk beams. Taewoo ducks his head. Even Seojun's expression does the small, almost smile again.
Daeon from his place against Minhyuk's chest lets out a long, satisfied sound in his sleep. We all look at him. And then, because this is apparently the kind of morning I am having, I step forward, close the remaining distance, and lean up and press the briefest, warmest kiss against Seojun's jaw because he is the closest and because I have been reading people my entire life and this man has been chosen for everything except himself and today somebody should choose him just because they want to. He goes completely still.
Then his hand comes up slowly and rests at the back of my shoulder, light, asking rather than claiming. "Slow." I remind him. "Slow," he agrees. His voice is different, warmer, like something that was always there finally had permission to surface. I take Daeon from Minhyuk's arms. My son stirs, blinks at me, then looks at the four alphas surrounding us and makes a sound of complete contentment and closes his eyes again. We stand there in a corridor in Incheon at 7:00 in the morning, five people who did not know each other yesterday, and something settles around us that I do not have a name for yet. I will find one. I have time now. For the first time in 2 years, I have time. And that is where Yoon Jaeha and little Daeon finally stop surviving and started belonging. Not because four powerful men swept in and fixed everything, but because one exhausted, gloved, fiercely loving omega looked at his son's certainty and decided it was finally safe to trust his own heart, too. If this story moved you, made you smile, made you feel something real today, please subscribe and hit the bell so you never miss a story on this channel. We pour everything into every single one of them.
>> [clears throat] >> Share this with someone who needs a good love story right now. Drop a comment and tell us your favorite moment because we genuinely read every single one.
Thank you so much for watching all the way to the end. You have no idea how much that means. We will see you in the next story.
Vidéos Similaires
VALORANT's Latest 'Exclusive' Tier Bundle is Rough...
KangaValorant
17K views•2026-05-28
Flight Attendant Mocks Poor Looking Black Woman — Mid Air Announcement Exposes Her Real Power
SkyboundStories-b4r
184 views•2026-05-28
I FIXED My Friend’s Blown Turbo RX-8… Then Sold It
Cameron-RX8
134 views•2026-05-28
NewsWatch 12 at 5: Top Stories
NewsWatch12
1K views•2026-05-28
Simon Jordan & Danny Murphy deliver PREDICTIONS for Arsenal's Champions League FINAL with PSG
talkSPORTArsenal
6K views•2026-05-28
Botting is OUT OF CONTROL in Classic WoW (Again)...
SolheimGaming
108 views•2026-05-28
The "AI Job Apocalypse" is CANCELLED!
WesRoth
9K views•2026-05-28
STREET FIGHTER 6 - INGRID Story Walkthrough @ 4K 60ᶠᵖˢ ✔
RajmanGamingHD
12K views•2026-05-28











