Since he couldnât keep laughing forever, Encrid soon stopped.
Seeing this, Rem grabbed Encridâs wrist and pulled out a bandage from his chest, wrapping it around tightly.
âJust stay behind me today. With your hand like this, youâre just asking to get yourself killed. If you tell the squad leader you got hurt during training, heâs going to flip out.â
âItâs fine.â
âWhat do you mean, itâs fine? Youâll die if you go to the battlefield with that hand. Is your lifelong dream to commit suicide? Because if it is, I wonât stop you.â
Rem wasnât wrong. Going into battle with a hand like this would be asking for death.
However, for Encrid, it wasnât a big problem. If he died one more time, it would just be the end of it.
Then, the hundred and twenty-fifth morning would dawn.
âItâs not boring.â
Because he could end todayâs repetition.
Encrid hadnât only been honing his swordsmanship all this time.
By repeating the same day a hundred and twenty-four times, he had devised ways to get through âtodayâ.
People often say that when a common soldier survives their first battle, itâs like they picked up a coin dropped by the goddess of luck.
If you donât have exceptional talent, luck plays a huge role in keeping you alive.
By Encridâs calculations, he would need such luck several times to avoid death.
âBut I canât rely on luck alone.â
Encrid didnât need to do that.
He knew what would happen on the battlefield, especially around him.
Therefore, he could prepare and brace himself.
On the one hundred and twenty-fourth time, Encrid was impaled through the neck again.
His hand was so messed up that he couldnât properly counter with his sword.
Even so, not wanting to waste even a single day, he watched the enemy soldierâs thrust carefully. He took a deep breath and endured until the end.
He did that.
âIt must hurt. Thatâs mercy.â
He endured the burning pain of the blade through his neck as he listened to the enemy soldierâs voice.
Something caught on his tongue, so just before he died, he spat it out. It was a broken molar.
It happened because he clenched his teeth so hard from the pain.
Yeah. It wasnât boring.
He had spent the repetitive days meaningfully, and that made it enjoyable.
But no matter what reason he attached to it.
âI donât want to die.â
There was no way dying could be enjoyable.
Especially having to die at the hands of some sadistic bastard who enjoy othersâ pain.
If he could end it, he would. The moment he realized he was trapped in a day, Encrid had made that decision.
And then.
Clang! Clang! Clang!
The hundred and twenty-fifth morning dawned.
* * *
Encrid got up and picked up Remâs shoes, shaking them out.
âWhat are you doing? Those are mine.â
âI know, they stink. If you throw them at the enemy, the smell alone would take out fifty of them.â
âJudging by your foul mood, did you have a good dream or something?â
A bug fell out of Remâs boot with a thud. Encrid stepped on it, crushing it.
âI saw it go in this morning.â
ââŠThanks.â
Rem chuckled and put his boots back on.
Leaving Rem behind, Encrid pushed aside the tent flap and stepped outside.
The sky was just beginning to lighten, a mix of dawnâs blue and the yellow of the rising sun.
The soldiers on the guard duty were busy clanging pots and pans.
The newly awakened soldiers either rubbed their eyes and grumbled or silently went about their tasks.
âDamn it, stop banging that. My headâs going to split.â
âWell, who told you to get drunk last night?â
It came from the tent in the back.
âShut up. If they catch you drinking, youâre in for a punishment.â
âWhatever.â
It was a conversation between the guard on duty and a soldier who had gotten drunk the night before.
Listening to this, Encrid glanced back and looked at the face of the drunken soldier.
He was a squad leader in another unit. And that guy had a good mother.
On the sixty-sixth day, to remember that day, Encrid had struck up a conversation with him and pretended to be friendly.
âArenât you on morning duty?â
âYou do it.â
As he glanced back, Encrid spoke abruptly to Rem, who had followed him.
âWhy should I?â
âYou could do it just once. Iâve covered for you more than five times.â
âWere you really counting that?â
âYeah, just yours.â
âWhy just mine?â
âBecause youâre annoying.â
During the hundred and twenty-five times, Encrid hadnât been able to leave a single scratch on Remâs body.
Not that he resented him. If he had any feelings, it was gratitude.
Anyway, Rem would do it.
Leaving morning duty to Rem was the pattern that had the highest survival rate and started the day in the best condition.
âFine. Damn it, Iâll do it.â
After some stretching to warm up, the cold morning air didnât make him shiver.
While twisting his body this way and that, Encrid stayed in front of the barracks.
One by one, the squad members stepped outside.
The first was Jaxon. He was one of the more diligent squad members. Jaxon made eye contact and gave a nod.
Encrid nodded back, somewhat casually.
After a few more came out in succession, Encrid caught the last one, who was half-asleep.
âHey, Big Eyes.â
âHuh?â
Nicknamed Big Eyes, his real name was Krais Olman.
He was a squad member with a delicate appearance.
And although the 444th squad was known for being full of misfits, Krais was the only one with below-average combat skills.
More precisely, he was someone even Encrid could beat up.
âYawn, why are you bothering me so early? Waking up at dawn is torture for someone as elite as me.â
Krais said, opening his mouth wide enough to tear.
He hadnât even wiped the sleep from his eyes or splashed water on his face, but it was a face worth looking at.
It was the kind of face that would catch the eye of anyone interested in men.
âGet me a few things.â
Krais tilted his head at Encridâs words.
It was unusual for Encrid to make such requests, so he was curious.
âDid you start smoking? Or drinking? I canât get you women. No matter how good I am, I canât bring one here in these times.â
Krais was the unitâs black market dealer who could get anything.
âDo I look like I want a woman?â
âNo. So what do you need?â
âFive throwing knives, oil-soaked leather, a large needle, deer leather gloves, ten white hellebore flowers, and a handful of alum.â
Encrid indicated the size of the leather with his hands, roughly enough to wrap around an adult manâs torso.
ââŠThatâs a lot of things I canât make sense of.â
âSo, canât you get them?â
Krais looked at Encrid for a moment and then nodded.
âThereâs nothing I canât get. But even if youâre the squad leader, itâs not free. You know that, right?â
âHow much?â
âSeventeen silver coins.â
Scammer.
Five throwing knives could be bought at a blacksmith for one or two silver coins.
Of course, if the price of iron soared, it could exceed three coins, but that was rare.
Moreover, what Krais would procure wouldnât be purely made of high-quality steel. Still, they would be decent enough to use.
Good leather could be expensive, but it wouldnât be the kind that goes to renowned workshops.
The only items that would really cost money were the needle and the deer leather gloves.
Those would definitely cost at least three silver coins, even at the lowest price.
White horse flowers could be found in a village for a few pennies.
Alum could be acquired cheaply if there was a nearby leather workshop.
Even though Encrid had a good eye for these things, he didnât argue.
Firstly, it was difficult to get such items within the unit without Krais.
Secondly, the odd price of seventeen coins suggested it was the fair rate Krais had set.
There was another reason as well.
âI can get them after breakfast, right?â
âYou know that means Iâll have to skip breakfast?â
âYou never ate properly anyway.â
âTrue. But as far as I know, squad leader, youâre not exactly swimming in silver, right?â
Krais made a round shape with his thumb and forefinger.
âNot right now.â
Sometimes he saved his wages, but recently he had spent it all on getting a new sword.
Right now, he was broke.
He would receive his pay after the battle, but asking for it in advance would make him look like a deserter.
âDamn, this is troublesome,â Krais said.
Encrid smiled in response.
It was the kind of smile that only someone with a solid backup plan could show.
âLend me five copper coins.â
Krais generally didnât trust people.
But it was different when it came to Encrid.
âBecause heâs the squad leader.â
From what Krais had seen, Encrid wasnât the type to mess around.
Most importantly, Encrid had saved his life.
Krais took out five copper coins and handed them over.
Encrid, jingling the coins in his hand, headed to the adjacent barracks.
Inside, a group had already set up a game early in the morning.
It was a dice game involving the last night watch and a few others who preferred gambling over sleep.
They were surprised to see Encrid, but upon recognizing him, they looked puzzled.
âWhatâs this? Isnât it the squad leader of the 444th?â
âWorking hard early in the morning, I see.â
Krais, observing this, was impressed. He disliked gambling. He hated being swindled by con men, and he didnât like the idea of leaving hard-earned money to luck, risking to gain or lose it.
Winning might be nice, but once someone gets a taste of it, they might get addicted to gambling.
Losing would just mean the pouch of money would disappear meaninglessly.
To Krais, gambling was something only fools did.
And yet, Encrid joined such a scene.
âMind if I join?â
âHere?â
It was the last night duty guard of the neighboring barracks.
He rolled his eyes and glanced at his gambling companions before nodding.
âSure.â
A fool is always welcome.
As Encrid moved to squat down, Krais grabbed his collar.
âYouâre planning to waste my five copper coins here?â
His eyes were bright and large despite the sleep in them, staring at Encrid.
âHe must have made quite a few women cry.â
Encrid thought, pushing Kraisâs hand away.
âOnce borrowed, itâs my money now.â
With that, Encrid took a seat.
The gathered gamblers shifted to make room.
âYou know how to play dice?â
A soldier rolling dice made from pig bones in a wooden cup asked.
âIf you get the same number, itâs double. If you bet on higher or lower numbers, you get what you bet. Right?â
He had watched over the shoulder, but he had seen it a hundred and twenty-five times.
It was impossible not to know.
There were three dice in total.
The sum was 18.
So, you call whether the sum would be higher or lower than 9.
The guy in the middle was the dealer.
This side rolled the dice while the others placed their bets.
âLetâs go for the first round then.â
They played a quick game before breakfast.
The stakes werenât high.
At least five copper coins, at most two silver coins.
Encrid placed a bet of five copper coins.
âLow.â
âHigh.â
âLow.â
âLow.â
âHigh.â
âHigh.â
âLow.â
In less than ten minutes, Encrid had two silver coins in his hand.
The charm of dice games is their speed.
Itâs a game thatâs enjoyable for its rapid, quick-paced nature.
Thatâs how they played.
At first, Encrid memorized the numbers that came up just for fun.
Would the dice always show the same numbers every day?
Even though it was a repeated day, things around him changed subtly.
So he knew.
The dice rolls were always the same.
âThe goddess of fortune must have given you more than a coin; maybe even a kiss,â said the soldier acting as the dealer when the silver coins in Encridâs hand exceeded ten.
âIsnât this cheating?â
Originally, another soldier right next to him would have spoken, but the dealer beat him to it.
âNo cheating here, just some good luck today. Seems like the goddess whispered in your ear.â
Encrid casually brushed off the suspicious glances.
They couldnât argue with that.
The dealer rolls the dice.
Even though they joke and tease, this was a bit too much.
Moreover, from the middle onwards, Encrid subtly bet on the winning side, gaining an advantage.
âIf itâs cheating, youâre the one rolling the dice.â
âThought you were casting a curse or something.â
âWell, it seems to be working.â
âOn other days, youâd go on like crazy, even if you kept losing.â
A soldier who had managed to make some money thanks to Encrid chuckled.
The dealer acknowledged and spun a few more rounds before saying, âLetâs wrap it up. Timeâs short.â
Before they knew it, it was almost breakfast time.
Encrid rolled ten silver coins in his hand.
Starting with five copper coins, he had come this far.
It was all the dealerâs money.
âThat was fun. How about I take these ten coins for the final round? Ready to take my winnings and leave.â
Originally, the maximum bet was five silver coins.
The dealer frowned at that. Given todayâs accuracy, there was no reason to hand over the winnings.
âThen letâs bet the same amount and wrap it up.â
Encrid continued before the other person could respond.
âWhat are the odds of rolling three dice and getting the same number? The soldier rolling the dice had never seen it in all his years, let alone in an actual game. It was all just fooling around for Encrid, and he was ready to wager all his winnings. At least thatâs how it sounded to him.
Suddenly, Krais stabbed Encridâs back.
Krais made a face.
âCrazy, right?â
No, not at all.
Encrid wasnât crazy.
âTen silver coins on the same number.â
âAlright.â
Clack!
The soldier rolled the dice and dropped them loudly on the floor.
Just to be safe, he gently rolled them, ready for any accident.
âLetâs see.â
With an expectant smile, the dealer opened the dice cup.
âWow, damn.â
âLady Luck came through, she did.â
âIs this for real?â
Everyone gathered was amazed.
Except Encrid.
Three.
The dice showed the same number.
[T/L: Please support me here: /revengerscans ]