©WebNovelPub
From A Producer To A Global Superstar-Chapter 297: Back to Work
Dayo woke up before the alarm as usual but the morning was off.
For a few seconds, he stayed still, staring at the ceiling, his mind slow and heavy, like it hadn’t fully returned to his body yet. The room was quiet. Too quiet. Morning light crept through the curtains, soft and indifferent.
He exhaled slowly.
On a normal morning he would jump up active ready to start the day.
But today was different-
Every part of him wanted to stay there.
Just lie down. Do nothing. Let the day pass without him.
It wasn’t physical tiredness. His body was fine. Trained. Used to pressure. Used to pushing forward even when it hurt. This was different. This was the kind of weight that sat in his chest and made movement feel unnecessary.
Emotional fatigue.
He thought of Luna without meaning to.
The news. The silence. The unanswered call.
He had lived two lives and in one he never found love until now and screwed it.
In his first life, love had been a distraction. In this one, it had been a choice. A conscious decision. And that somehow made it worse.
He closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them again.
"No," he muttered. "Get up."
There was one thing he had learned pain didn’t excuse weakness. If anything, the days you felt weakest were the days discipline mattered the most.
He took a deep breath and he knew he had to get up.
He forced himself out of bed.
After rising his face he dragged his heavy body and wore his jogging kits and jogged out.
The jog was harder than usual.
Not because his legs failed him, but because his mind refused to stay in one place. His thoughts kept drifting fragments of memories, unanswered questions, things he didn’t allow himself to fully think about.
Why didn’t she wait?
Why didn’t she tell me?
Was I ever meant to know?
He clenched his jaw and increased his pace.
By the time he finished his routine, sweat clung to his skin, lungs burning slightly. The physical strain helped. It didn’t fix anything, but it quieted the noise enough for him to breathe.
Back home, he stood in the kitchen, staring at food he had no appetite for. He settled for something small bread, water just enough to keep himself functional.
That was all he needed today.
The office felt the same as always.
People passed by. Some greeted him casually, unaware. Others didn’t realize who he was at all cause he choose to keep his identity hidden for now. Dayo preferred it that way. No attention. No unnecessary concern.
He went straight to Min-Jae’s office.
Min-Jae looked up the moment Dario walked in—and froze.
"You good?" Min-Jae asked slowly.
Dayo nodded. "I’m fine."
Min-Jae leaned back, studying him. "You say that every time something is clearly wrong."
Dayo didn’t respond.
Min-Jae sighed. "Your eyes. You think I don’t notice?"
"Notice what?"
"That something’s broken."
Dayo’s expression didn’t change, but his shoulders stiffened slightly.
"It’s nothing."
Min-Jae stood up. "I’m not letting you leave until you talk."
Dayo exhaled through his nose. "You’re annoying."
"And you’re bad at lying at least today you dont seem to be able to hide it meaning its something about emotions."
Silence stretched between them.
Finally, Dayo spoke.
"Remember the global competition?" he asked.
Min-Jae blinked. "Yeah. Why?"
"That night I left the hotel," Dario continued. "I told you I had somewhere to be."
Min-Jae frowned. "Yeah...?"
"It was Luna."
Min-Jae’s eyes widened. "What?"
"She was staying in the same hotel," Dario said calmly. Too calmly. "We met."
Min-Jae ran a hand through his hair. "That’s insane."
"We were together back then," Dayo added. "Long before all of this."
Min-Jae stared at him. "You’re serious."
"Yes."
"And now?" Min-Jae asked carefully already guessing where this was heading to after all he had know Dayo for more than Five years he was a strong person when it comes to abilities but his weaknesses was glaring when it came to handling things emotionally je processed it okay but something to hard.
Dayo looked away. "You’ve seen the news."
Min-Jae’s expression shifted. "Yeah about the pregnancy?"
"Yes."
A heavy silence settled.
"So... you broke up?" Min-Jae asked.
Dayo nodded once. "Four years ago."
"Why?"
"You already know why," Dayo replied quietly. "I don’t fight hard enough when I should."
Min-Jae swore under his breath. "Damn."
"I tried calling her," Dario continued. "She didn’t answer."
Min-Jae sat back down slowly. "That’s rough."
"I don’t blame her," Dario said. "She moved on."
Min-Jae studied him. "And you?"
Dayo didn’t answer immediately.
"I’ll manage."
Min-Jae leaned forward. "Listen to me. Loving someone deeply is hard. Losing them is worse. But don’t let this stop you."
"I won’t."
"You better not," Min-Jae said firmly. "You have too much on your shoulders. Too many people depending on you."
Dayo nodded.
Min-Jae smirked slightly. "Also, don’t think I forgot—you still owe me vocals."
Dayo scoffed. "I already accepted my fate."
"Good," Min-Jae said. "Now get to work."
The studio buzzed quietly as they stepped inside.
Yura was already there, headphones on, practicing with focus. She looked up when she saw them.
"Director," she said, bowing slightly. "Is everything okay?"
Dayo gave a small nod. "Yes. Keep going."
She smiled and returned to her work.
Dayo watched her for a moment—her determination, her discipline. It grounded him.
After giving final instructions, he stepped out with Min-Jae.
"All the artists you requested are in the meeting hall," Min-Jae said. "You said you wanted to select a few today."
Dario nodded. "Let’s go."
As they walked, his mind settled into something familiar evaluation, instinct, calculation. The emotional weight didn’t disappear, but it stopped controlling him.
Work always did that.
The meeting hall doors opened.
Artists looked up. Some nervous. Some confident. Some hiding ambition behind calm faces.
Dayo scanned the room quietly.
This was the future.
And whatever pain he carried, it wouldn’t stop him from moving forward.
Not this time.







