For a fleeting instant, a deep emotion flashed through Yehyeonâs eyes.
I wanted to praise him for suppressing it. I couldnât even begin to imagine how tangled his insides must be.
Of course, seasoned as he was, the large eyes quickly took on a businesslike sheen.
Yehyeon nodded and shifted his gaze to my subordinates.
He looked in turn at Yoow, who was glaring like he wanted to kill someone; at Igor, his interlaced fingers resting on the table; and at Rose, who wouldnât take her eyes off me.
âIf Hildebert is abducted, you will have to follow our sideâs instructions afterward. Is that acceptable?â
It was right to clearly establish the chain of command.
I looked at the people seated in a line to my right.
Igor spoke first.
âIâll just follow Hildeâs decision.â
His voice was mercifully calm.
He was also keeping my request to avoid titles like âleaderâ or âcaptainâ during meetings.
âIâve never managed to stop him before.â
âI will follow the decision as well.â
Rose added softly, bowing her head shyly.
Her pale face flushed slightly as she spoke, and then she turned to gaze at me with open fervor.
âHow could I dare question an order?â
I pretended not to notice Roseâs... far too passionate stare.
Forcing myself to remain composed, I shifted my gaze across the table and caught sight of three members of the leadership blinking.
They seemed surprised by my subordinatesâ reactions.
Having encountered more than enough lunatics in leadership meetings, none of the three were flustered enough to comment directly on Roseâs anticsâbut still.
Ska spoke.
âI expected more pushback.â
Yoow replied curtly.
âFrom our perspective, weâd rather let a few faceless Badgers escape on their own. Ideally, Iâd like to lock that golden-eyed one up in a cabin somewhere. But I fail every time I try to stop Hildebert, so making a fuss wouldnât change anything. Itâd just tank my reputation.â
This bastard is still sulking at me.
He came along without complaint and behaved more quietly than expected, so I thought heâd changed.
Igor frowned and turned toward the strategist.
But Rose beat him to it.
âDonât act like a child, esteemed strategist. That wonât make Hilde love you any more.â
Pffft!
Someone sprayed water.
I covered my eyes with my hand and took a moment to collect myself.
Then, just before Yoow could start growling, I gave an order.
âEnough chatter.â
My subordinates obediently shut their mouths.
Holding back a sigh, I looked at the leadership seated across from me.
âMy apologies.â
Ska laughed at length, mischief shining in his eyes. Aide Gilbert shot me a look that said hang in there, while at the edge of my vision I noticed Richard Green sharply furrow his brow.
Yehyeon, however, didnât blink.
âVery well.â
He returned his gaze to the screen and added without emotion,
âSince the superiorâsubordinate relationship is clearly established, I wonât worry about command confusion going forward.â
âThough there may be some orders I donât hear.â
Yoow added darkly.
âI tend to miss unreasonable ones.â
Bang!
Dante slammed the table.
âWhat?!â
âYou didnât need to say that out loud.â
Yehyeon smiled faintly.
Still wearing that slight smile, he looked at Yoow.
âEither way, understood. Iâll keep it in mind.â
Yehyeon was right.
If Yoow truly had no intention of following Black Badger commands, he wouldnât have added a remark like that. It was a small bit of petulance on Yoowâs partâdonât issue orders stupid enough to be disobeyed.
The others seemed to grasp his meaning as well, because no further argument followed.
Dante appeared to be restrained by the person beside him....
In the first place, it was absurd for an ordinary Badger to argue against something the supreme commander had decided.
From somewhere in the corner, someone muttered, âIs Taleb their leader?â I pretended not to hear.
All eyes returned to the screen.
Yehyeon moved on to the main point.
âFirst, Iâll outline the general plan.â
A map appeared on the screen.
After scanning it, the commander asked Yoow,
âBefore that, there are two things I want to ask. First, whether we have any mages available to mobilize at this time, or whether itâs possible to sway enemy mages. Second, whether you know of a strategy better than sending Hilde to the negotiation site.â
For the first time, Yoowâs face lost its dissatisfaction and mockery.
The strategist wiped his expression clean and looked at Yehyeon.
After a moment, he answered carefully.
âMages are extremely insular and arrogant. They canât even imagine living among humans. In short, we have no mages we can mobilize, and persuasion would be exceedingly difficult.â
That was right.
Every mage had sided with Kyle. Not a single one had accepted coexistence with humansâvery much in character for them.
Even back in the Empire, Iâd never been close with them.
They didnât enjoy interacting with people and had little fondness for those who relied on their bodies, like knights.
Everywhere, they were treated as precious assets....
As I revisited old memories, Yoow continued beside me.
âHowever, some of them become extremely craven when their lives are on the line, so if we grab them by the throat and threaten them, we might force a surrender. Itâs not common, though. Fundamentally, theyâre highly narcissistic.â
âWas the guy who groveled at your feet last time a mage?â
Trevain suddenly spoke.
I widened my eyes and looked toward the voice.
Why ask that?
Puzzled, I still answered the senior.
âNo. He was just an old noble.â
âWho?â
Igor raised an eyebrow at me.
I turned to my subordinate.
âShenton Wheelwobbler.â
âOh my.â
Rose covered her mouth in surprise.
âHeâs still alive?â
âSo it seems.â
âThatâs surprising. He mustâve just been burning through rations all this time.â
âAre you referring to the humanoid Creature Richard Green reported before?â
Ignoring Igorâs mutter, Yehyeon asked in a curious tone.
I nodded.
âYes.â
At my report, Yehyeonâs expression turned strange.
He stared at me with an odd look, then asked,
âDid he surrender? I was only informed that the humanoid Creature died. I wasnât told he surrendered. Did you kill someone who had surrendered?â
âYou could call it a token surrender. He had previously received the harshest sentence, so it was surprising the enemy had kept him alive â NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t â (Only on NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t) at all. As a prisoner, he had no information to offer.â
âWho killed him?â
The commander narrowed his eyes at me.
I answered truthfully.
âI beheaded him myself.â
Thud.
Something fell.
When I turned, I saw Ami with her phone dropped on the desk, mouth hanging open.
Ricardo watched me with narrowed eyes. Other seniors looked equally shocked.
What exactly were they shocked by?
That Iâd killed someone without authorizationâor by the method?
As I furrowed my brow, pondering, Yehyeonâs voice came.
âThe charge?â
âHuman trafficking.â
The commander was silent for a while.
Only after Yun grumbled, âYou shouldâve brought him in alive,â did Yehyeon let out a small sigh.
In a subdued voice, he said,
âI understand the logic, but next time, bring them in alive if possible.â
âYes.â
âLetâs return to the topic. Youâre saying that persuading most mages would be impossible?â
âIn simple terms, yes.â
Yoow answered.
After biting his lip and falling silent for a moment, he added in an unwilling tone,
âAnd as for the second question, I donât have an alternative.â
âThen we have no choice but to make a decisive move this time.â
Yehyeon muttered gloomily.
âAs they requested, Hilde will stand at the negotiation site. We will not lose Hildebert.â
âYou must have a plan that ensures that.â
âJack.â
âYes.â
Kairos replied, having worn a faint smile until now.
All eyes turned to the contracted envoy.
Yoow glared at Kairos as if to say youâre the root of this, but Kairos didnât blink.
Seated in the only spot Yehyeon had designatedâclosest to the screenâthe man began his explanation.
âWeâll use the Remnant Wraith.â
Even hearing it again made my stomach twist.
âThe Remnant Wraith is an extremely dangerous Creature sleeping outside the Core. We plan to draw out the enemy leader with it. The enemy wonât be able to ignore the Remnant Wraith. While heâs dealing with it, Hilde wonât be killed. In that window, weâll release Hilde from his restraints.â
âAnd what guarantee do we have that youâll lure it out safely?â
Yoow lowered his voice.
âIf you die, thereâs a high chance Hildeâs life ends meaninglessly as well. We canât stake Hildeâs life on your ability.â
âThereâs no way to eliminate risk entirely, strategist.â
âAt the very least, I couldnât devise a better operation.â
With that answer, Yehyeon leaned back in the black leather chair reserved for the head seat and issued an order.
âJack. Give a detailed report on the Remnant Wraith.â
âYes.â
Kairos replied politely and tapped the tablet in front of him.
The map on the conference room screen zoomed in rapidly.
A barren region without a blade of grass.
Parched landâand at its center, a black pit burned dark, like a cigarette butt scorching the ground.
The screen split in two. On the left, a satellite map; on the right, what appeared to be drone footage.
Watching the drone cross the dry land toward the pit made my head ache.
More precisely, watching the Remnant Wraith slowly stretch within the pit did.
âThis is insane.â
A massive black form sluggishly raised its upper body, thrust its chest forward, and gazed at the sky.
It stretched long, then slowly twisted its torso.
An upper-rank monster staring straight at the drone.
Bottomless black eyes.
Seeing the Remnant Wraith on screen, I recoiled in shock.
âThe horns are fully formed?â
A plaster-pale, expressionless female face.
Goat-like horns grew from both sides of her head, arcing upward until they met, forming a complete ring.
A completed Remnant Wraithâsomething spoken of only in legends.
Through the camera, it looked at us.