She Mocked The Korean Mafia Boss’s Portrait—Then He Answered-Teptep

Lena Roberts had not meant to kiss the portrait.

She had meant to finish the files, check the travel changes, send three impossible emails, and leave Min-jun Kan’s office with her dignity intact.

That had been the plan at eight o’clock.

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By eight seventeen, one shoe was on the marble, the other was somewhere near the edge of the rug, and she was standing in front of an oil painting of the most frightening man she had ever worked for.

The office looked almost too expensive to contain a human breakdown.

Black marble caught the light from the ceiling and threw it back in hard, polished strips.

The glass wall beyond the desk was washed silver with late November rain.

The city below blurred into towers, headlights, and wet darkness, all of it distant enough to feel unreal.

Lena had spent two years in that office, yet it had never felt like somewhere she was allowed to breathe.

Everything in it belonged to Min-jun Kan.

The desk with its flawless surface.

The low leather chairs where men lied carefully.

The locked cabinet nobody mentioned.

The faint scent of coffee, cold now, sharp and bitter in the air.

And above it all, the portrait.

It was ridiculous, though she had never dared say so aloud.

Large, dramatic, almost old-fashioned in its seriousness, it showed Min-jun seated in the very chair behind his desk, his suit dark, his hands joined beneath his chin, his eyes rendered with such chilly accuracy that Lena had once apologised to it after knocking over a paper tray.

She hated that memory.

She hated that she had apologised.

Most of all, she hated that the painted version of him seemed to expect it.

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