The shocking part is that I canât even sense exactly what kind of emotion I let leak out.
But I definitely performed an emotional transfer. Just like when Clyde stabbed my neck and the emotion splashed over to Kyle, unintentionally, I let my emotions spill onto my kin.
What did I transfer?
It certainly wasnât anything willing or pleasant.
Itâs fortunate the transfer was cut off quickly.
My body trembled with shame and guilt dragged up by my memories.
âHilde.â
So when I woke up and saw Yun looking down at me with his usual calm expression, I felt relieved.
âYou awake?â
I saw my shooter sitting beside the bed.
A pale, quiet room.
I couldnât quite grasp the situation. My memories were patchy. I remembered entering the Core while listening to Samuelâs irritated nagging. I also remembered waking up in the ICU and confirming that the mission had ended safely.
Do I still have a fever?
âYun.â
When I called his name, Yun lifted an eyebrow slightly.
I cleared my hoarse throat.
âWhat happened?â
âYou donât remember going into shock?â
Yun said.
âAcute sepsis. You made it through the worst, though.â
âI went into shock?â
Yun gave a small nod.
I let out a long breath.
And I thought again how fortunate it was that the person by my side right now was Yun. He was someone who wouldnât get flustered and would handle things objectively.
True to that, my shooter quietly went to fetch Samuel and came back.
Samuel rushed in, drew blood, ran a few checks, then finally let out a relieved sigh.
âYou pulled through. As long as recovery goes smoothly, youâll be fine.â
âThank you every time, Doctor.â
âBe grateful to the kids who were pacing back and forth worrying about you.â
The doctor scribbled something on his pad.
âDo you know how worried they were? For five days straight, they took turns staying by your side without leaving. When your condition suddenly worsened three days ago, they all turned white as sheets.â
Five days?
My mouth fell open.
âItâs already been five days?â
âYeah.â
Samuel gave me a brief explanation.
It was simple. Acute sepsis hit me. Fever and inflammatory markers skyrocketed, and I went back and forth on the edge between life and death. I donât remember it well.... Apparently my temperature spiked to 40 degrees, and I drifted in and out of consciousness.
But now, he said with a faint smile, my inflammation levels had dropped a lot.
âGet some more sleep.â
Thatâs what he told me, and to Yun he added,
âCall me if anything comes up.â
Then he disappeared out of the room.
Once again, it was just Yun and me. The corridor outside was extremely quiet. I was in a double room. There was clearly another patient assigned to the bed next to mine, but they werenât here right now.
Iâd find out who my roommate was soon enough.
More importantly....
I lifted my hand, cluttered with tubes and lines, and lightly tapped Yunâs arm.
âIâm sorry for worrying you. Could you explain what I missed over these five days?â
âFirst of all, the missionâs over. There were injuries, but no fatalities.â
Yun glanced at the watch on his wrist.
A space sharply defined by the presence of white bulb light. Beyond the curtain, it seemed like the sun had already set.
I nodded and asked,
âCould you also explain the process of my rampage?â
âWhy?â
A look of puzzlement crossed Yunâs face.
âWhat difference does knowing make?â
âI thought it might help me understand better how to stop it next time.â
I told a suitably harmless lie.
If I said I wanted to apologize to the seniors after hearing it, he probably wouldnât understand. Heâd say something like, âYou didnât intend it, so thereâs nothing to apologize for.â
Yun studied me with his pitch-black eyes.
âAlright.â
Guess I gave the right answer.
âFrom start to finish?â
âYes.â
Yun did as I asked.
Throughout his explanation, there was no value judgment to speak of. Even when he said he made a junior say âI love you,â or when he mentioned that Iâd punched him so hard his insides were basically shreddedâyet recovered within five minutesâthere was no emotion in his voice.
Only my stomach twisted as I listened.
It was only after he finished speaking that Yun seemed to notice I had my face covered with my hands.
âWhatâs wrong?â
Once again, I thought how fortunate it was that the first person I saw upon waking was Yun.
âItâs nothing.â
After lowering my hands, I muttered,
âIâm sorry, Yun. Even if it wasnât intentional, I apologize for crushing your insides with my fist and choking your neck.â
âOh, sure. Thereâs no real need to apologize, though.â
â...What about the others....â
âTheyâre taking turns keeping watch. Theyâll come by as time passes.â
âAh.â
âThe rescue team and Jonathan Kudo are rotating. Up to a point, your subordinates were here too.â
The last addition was oddly phrased.
I blinked, trying to process Yunâs words.
Seeing the confusion on my face, Yun crossed his legs and added,
âYou said you didnât want visits from your subordinates. Donât you remember?â
I covered my face again.
I didnât remember. I didnât remember, but it felt like something {Nâ˘oâ˘vâ˘eâ˘lâ˘iâ˘gâ˘hâ˘t} I wouldâve said.
My insides twisted with shame and guilt.
What kind of emotion did I send flying?
Still covering my face, I clutched my head.
What did I recklessly transfer to them? I wanted to ask, but I didnât have the courage, and I didnât want to face the problem head-on right now.
âI suppose I did.â
So I just mumbled.
âThank you for coming to see me. I know youâre busy.â
Yun merely shrugged.
Then, for a while, he didnât speak to me. With his arms crossed, he carefully observed me lying in bed.
The silence was rather welcome.
I stared at the ceiling, lost in thought.
The flood of information that hit me the moment I woke up was overwhelming. What Iâd done to my seniors, and what Iâd done to my kin, all weighed heavily on my stomach.
My sixth sense was still empty. I couldnât feel any of the malice-filled emotions enemies used to send out.
Ricardo was right. Forgetting and losing are different things.
But I didnât have the courage to face the issue yet.
For now, I decided to believe that since Clyde hadnât completed the leaf-vein removal, whatever had been damaged would eventually recover.
I redirected my attention.
âYun.â
âWhat.â
âIs Yehyeon busy?â
âPretty.â
Then it would be hard for him to come visit.
Unlike others, I wouldnât be able to see him in person, so I judged that I should ask someone close to him instead.
âIs Yehyeon okay?â
My shooter looked puzzled again.
âFor ordinary people, stabbing someone they know with their own hand is quite a shock. And Yehyeon also has the trauma of stabbing Lee Seunghyun, doesnât he.â
âAh.â
Only after I explained did Yun make a sound of understanding.
He nodded slowly.
âIf you mean it that way, heâs fine.â
âReally?â
âYeah. He stabbed you with resolve, so it doesnât seem like it hit him as hard as it did back with Lee Seunghyun. When you were hovering between life and death from sepsis, he did kind of lose his mind, but then again, he wasnât the only one.â
âAh.... Thatâs a relief.â
âIâve been calling him Oedipus lately.â
Is he insane?
If Iâd had any strength, I wouldâve bolted upright.
Lacking it, I could only gape with my mouth hanging open.
Seeing my stunned expression, Yun smirked.
âHe grumbled a bit, telling me to stop teasing him.â
This guy, seriously....
I was dumbfounded, but thanks to what he told me, I felt a little lighter.
Yun wasnât the type to lie and say something was fine when it wasnât. And since it was about Yehyeon, it couldnât have been indifference either.
I let out a long breath.
âWhat happened to Jin?â
âThatâs under the Personnel Directorâs jurisdiction, so I donât really know.â
â...The others, my kin.â
I hadnât asked expecting an answer.
But surprisingly, my shooter gave a fairly detailed one.
âThe strategist is serving as an advisor to the top brass, the pharmaceutical company presidentâs wife went back to headquarters for a bit, and that pillar-like bastard is holed up in your cabin.â
Thatâs a relief.
They were all living more or less as usual.
âAnd the redhead is usually in the hospital lobby all day.â
â...What?â
What is that supposed to mean?
âWhy?â
I asked blankly.
Yun stared straight through me.
âHow should I know.â
âNo.... What is this.... What is he even doing there? You donât mean heâs literally just sitting there, right? You mean he sits for a bit and then leaves, right?â
âNo. Heâs there all day, every day.â
âEvery day?â
What the hell is he doing?
Why is he doing that when he canât even see out of his left eye? I donât remember him being the type to waste time on something so irrational or sentimental.
There had to be far more meaningful things he could be doing.
Maybe my disbelief was written all over my face, because Yun said,
âProbably acting as the one who hears news about you as quickly as possible. And that watchdog-looking guy seems to have taken on the role of managing your cabin.â
âNews? He doesnât need to sit down there looking that pitiful just to hear news.â
âMaybe he wants to hear it as fast as possible.â
âBut the lobby?â
âYou kicked them out.â
Ah.
â...What did I say when I kicked them out?â
âYou told them to leave. You muttered heatedly that you didnât want them nearby.â
â...How did they react?â
âThey said to take good care of you, then all disappeared at once.â
I suddenly wanted to cry.
The long time theyâd spent waiting endlessly for me, the games theyâd made to crush their despair during that time, flashed through my mind.
I remembered the absurd excuses theyâd come up with just to stay in the cabin.
But I just couldnât bring myself to face them.
I knew it was pathetic, but in this state, I couldnât bring myself to see them.
âHow are the people who were taken hostage doing?â
Knowing it was cowardly, I changed the subject.
I decided not to think about the agent sitting in the lobby, at least for now.
My shooter slowly rose from his seat.
âThatâs also why things outside are so hectic right now.â
â...What?â
âStill, thatâs something youâd be better off hearing from the person sharing this room with you, not me.â
Who is that, then?
And what does âhecticâ even mean? Just as I was about to ask, the door Samuel had closed earlier opened and someone walked in.
A man in a patient gown, wearing black slippers.
Still neat, but looking a bit more tired than usual, he grinned while gripping an IV pole.
My eyes widened at the unexpected sight.
âAdjunct?â
âHilde. Youâve been through a lot.â
Ska Owen rolled the IV stand in with a refreshing smile.
***
Jonathan Kudo relieved Yun.
Ska had Jonathan wait briefly outside the room.
âThereâs something I need to tell Hilde.â
Jonathan made a face like a child whoâd had his game console taken away, but eventually complied with Skaâs words.
The senior stared intently at me, then slid the hospital room door shut.
âSay a reasonable amount and let him sleep.â
âGot it.â
Perching on his own bed, Ska waved his hand dismissively, shooing Jonathan away.
The door closed with a dull thud.
Silence returned. With a faint smile, I waited for my superiorâwho had turned his head asideâto speak.
âDo you have the energy to talk?â
From long experience in the organization, I could tell he was about to bring up work.
If heâd even sent Jonathan away, this didnât seem like a trivial matter.
I nodded.
âYes. Please, speak freely.â
âMy apologies. Bringing this up to a critical patient whoâs only just regained consciousness.... If youâre tired, say so immediately. Itâs not urgent.â
âPlease tell me. Is your hospitalization also related to this issue, Adjunct?â
âNo. I was hospitalized because Jaeyeon hit me.â
What?
I blinked in confusion, and Ska laughed.
âYou know he has periodic fits by now, donât you?â
âI was aware, but.... I thought it was only toward the Commander.â
âHe hates everyone in the leadership who has his biometric data. Usually he goes after the representative. Since I was inside the Core during this mission, this time I got beaten instead.â
Does that make any sense?
I frowned, but Ska waved it off, saying this wasnât the important part and could be discussed later, then changed the topic.
âLetâs start with the matter of the hostages who returned while brainwashed.â
Ska Owen continued calmly as he watched my eyes widen.
âAnd after that, letâs talk about Kyle. I think heâs got something up his sleeve.â