you ask minju where she sees herself in five years; and then you rail her.
For those not paying attention - of which there seems to be an increasing number - it’s not that she doesn’t have the pedigree. But just shy of getting into that storied history or into the nitty-gritty of her curriculum vitae, the only thing that really matters is:
“This all seems a little beneath me."
It’s another day of this. Of you, of her, of trying to gather the mien of someone who isn’t utterly disarmed by Minju’s usual, beautiful, challenging self. Which, let’s be honest, is always an uphill battle.
Minju nearly pouts, flipping through a copy of the dossier idly from the other side of the desk in a gesture that reads both bored and dismissive and every little thing it needs to annoy you.
"Look,” you offer up, graciously diplomatic all things considered, “it’s about finding the right springboard, to something else more… substantial.”
“Or to something else, you know, beneath me.” Her red lips turn down ever so slightly. She doesn’t seem so interested in playing ball on this one. And, for you, amounts to something of a huge problem.
See, Minju doesn’t quite understand how the working world really, actually works. That the carrot that’s dangled in front of her is your carrot just as much as it is hers - that you stand to lose out just as badly. That it’s both of your asses on the line if things fall apart and Minju’s shortsighted insistence to only work those certain roles befitting a name like hers puts that all at risk.
“Maybe you can tell me something,” you start, coming across more curt than you possibly intended - but not by much, “how many of your former cohorts have had their career aspirations line up with reality, Miss Kim?”
“I’m picky, not naive,” she sighs, not missing a beat, and you watch her dark hair cascade gently down her shoulder when she reaches a hand back to unfix her loose ponytail from its hair clip.
“You might see how I can get the two confused.”
“Then spare me the lecture,” says Minju.
Though she says nothing else, an unspoken you already get paid too much for that hangs in the air.
The tricky part is that no matter what else Minju does, her contract has some non-negotiable clauses to them that no talent has before, or will likely get afterwards. Things that cannot be broken. Like the requirement of her making x number of media appearances, and she gets to approve all of them.
Or that her agent’s take home comes from a fixed fifteen percent of her gross earnings, with further incentives when her roles hit specific milestones. But with her refusing projects like the ones in the dossier before you, it leaves you in the unenviable position of losing out on your guaranteed fixed income or trying to convince your diva talent to do what it is she ought to be doing.
The truth is that there’s quite a long list of things no one has had the guts to say ‘no’ to yet.
And, well, it’s rather simple and obvious when you look at her:
Minju is that particular blend of A-lister gorgeous. The special look that’s all kinds of mesmerizing and magnetizing, in full bloom - that makes you feel like you’re suffocating in beauty. Like if she said come here, you would go; the type where a single look is all it takes and then - just like that - she’s got your number forever.
Because everything about her is tailored - from her clothes to her perfect porcelain features. And they made her that way for a purpose: to sell records. (Which, that’s exactly what they did.) You can hardly blame the people in power over there, wanting what’s best, in a position where everyone would kill for a taste, or even just a glimmer of possibility.
“I don’t suppose the part of the governor’s neglected wife is capturing your imagination.” You push the dossier closer, and she doesn’t so much as look at it. “It’s this year’s big budget political thriller, a shoo-in for awards.”
“You mean the one who ends up in a lot of very steamy shots on the apartment’s rooftop pool. Maybe I’m mistaken, but you can’t really unshow your tits.”
"This isn’t about being above, Miss Kim, it’s about being well regarded; it’s about proving you’re easy to work with,” you argue. “We could-”
“Find a better use of my time?” she cuts in, closing the dossier shut. There’s a long moment in which she’s looking you over, her gaze sizing up every little inch.
“Your big break won’t happen just because you ask for it.” You grimace a bit, hating to tell it like it is, but not really wanting to just coddle her either. “But listen - we work together, one project at a time - we can build up to it.”
Minju crosses her arms with a loud hmph. “And what are you going to do if I decide not to accept these projects?”
There’s enough edge in her voice that it gives you pause.
“ If,” she says again pointedly, a teasing little grin tugging at her lips.
So - actually, another thing: when you start digging into the details, there’s more problems than just what can be seen at the surface. Which perhaps it’s too reductive, but essentially everything between you and the talent sitting on the other side of your desk is not quite so straightforward. It was never about Minju doing the best she could for either of your careers; it was about Minju making sure her needs were taken care of, no matter what.
Months ago, thanks in part to the way Minju filled out this tiny black excuse of a cocktail dress, and as a compromise of sorts, there’s an uncharacteristic mistake you ended up making. Or two or maybe a couple.
Because there’d been the perfect backdrop - an end of year party, beautiful dresses and suits, lots and lots of champagne, the kind of jovial mood that inspired one drink too many - and then you and her, taking off down one of the hallways, towards the exit.
Of course, you ended up exactly where neither of you should have ever been - where the snow was falling gracefully and melting into the pavement, behind a private accessway at the back of the venue, somewhere dark and dingy and dripping with a smell reminiscent of garbage; somewhere your hands had gripped firm fistfuls of Minju’s waist before you shoved her up against the back of the building.
In short:
You remember how she gasped when her palms hit the brickwork, how you figured you may as well give her everything she wants.
(So what, it was one time, you hear yourself explaining, mildly repentant, and to say that it’s complicated the matter is a massive fucking understatement.)
In the interest of full disclosure, you tell her, “what exactly did you have in mind?”
“That maybe,” she hums, tongue flicking out over her lips before she purses them thoughtfully. “You should persuade me a little better.”
“And let’s suppose, I don’t do any of that,” you persist.
“It’d be a shame, wouldn’t it, having such a promising future cut short so early? If word got out. From such a respectable agency too, of all places. Couldn’t live with yourself,” Minju remarks, leaning forward on her elbows until her eyes are level with your own. “Come to think of it, it’s the kind of thing that could totally, like, end your career.”
But as she sits there, arching that perfect brow again, you don’t feel so good about the whole thing. You take another look at her - which, your mistakes start there, if nowhere else - at the girl that is somehow not the airheaded starlet she’s supposed to be. No, she’s calculating. A rarity, though you do know the type: here’s a girl who just happened to take her brains for granted in the years she was pampered by the industry - the same one that fattened on her only to later spit her out. And that thought, the look of cold intellect in her eyes and the slight upward curl at the corner of her mouth, has you frozen just a bit stiff.
She takes a key card from her clutch, and throws it onto the desk in front of you.
“Minju,” you caution, and there’s a taste of danger on each syllable of her name - more of a warning for yourself than you can conceive of it ever being for her.
“I’m only suggesting” - she’s watching you nearly fucking choke, amused - “what’s best.”
And when the lines get muddied between the two of you, that’s exactly the issue. What’s best. As though this was always Minju’s aim. Maybe you’ve read it wrong, maybe you’ve gotten too lost in your own delusions, maybe - maybe, it doesn’t matter -
“For work,” she adds, at which point her knee bumps yours playfully beneath the desk, leaving the suggestion open, and the implication unmistakable. “Whatever’s required.”
Here, you should definitely tell Minju no. Say no. Say: you’re a professional, and getting involved with her, romantically, officially, personally - whatever - would lead to nothing but disaster. That’d be the responsible thing probably. It’d be generous to say you end up getting even halfway there:
“There’s rules against this, you know.”
Minju tips her head. “Why ever would there be rules in place against doing your job?”
She thinks that if she feigns being clueless, you’ll bite, which -
“Against me folding you over this desk and fucking you until your forget your name.”
“My apologies,” she practically coos, knowing that she’s not only made progress, but that she’s wrapping you around her finger. She is a bright girl after all. “You might see how I can get the two confused.”
At that, you figure, the only real move, to be perfectly blunt, is to play Minju at her own game -
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