Her words snapped me back to my senses.
I blinked and answered.
âI didnât get hit.â
The short-haired senior snorted.
Itâs true....
If necessary, I was going to avoid it even if it meant using force. I didnât get a chance to argue that. Sophia swept her black bob back over her shoulder and walked toward me.
The senior who had been hit by Sophia was unconscious, collapsed on the floor.
The people standing nearby looked so shocked theyâd forgotten how to move. They only opened and closed their mouths; no one spoke.
With every step, the container boxes echoed with a hollow thud, thud.
Sophia passed the stiffened Badgers indifferently.
âStep back.â
The black-haired senior who stopped in front of me said it.
His gaze was directed over my shoulder.
âWhat are you doing, surrounding a junior like this?â
My body was freed.
The senior who had been holding me stepped back. I rubbed the area around my trapezius.
Then I saw familiar faces.
Carl, letting out a sigh, and Ricardo, narrowing his eyes as he swept his gaze over the Badgers.
They didnât move, and for a while, everyone remained silent.
The one who spoke was an unfamiliar senior.
âDo you have no pride?â
It was a Badger with his hair tied into a single topknot.
A feeling I knew well flared in the eyes of the senior who had asked the question.
âYou were born and raised in the middle of the war, werenât you. Do you really want to protect that?â
âHow many?â
Carl asked the question.
The Badger who had spoken turned to look at Carl.
â...Twenty-three.â
âEveryoneâs misfortune canât be compared. But donât you think thereâs a reason why Badgers whoâve either fought in the war or grown up in its flames have accepted Hildebert?â
There wasnât even a fragment of anger in Carlâs voiceâvery like him.
Heâs an impressive person.
Of course, there are plenty of times when that calm tone doesnât work.
The Badger whoâd been rebutted frowned, and a male Badger who had been standing opposite him, silent until now, added,
âYouâve forgotten your anger toward the enemy, Senior.â
What are you talking about.
âOr forgotten your loss.â
How can someone say something so careless?
Without even imagining the weight of the past Sophia and Ricardo carry.
A cold anger climbed up my chest. I was even more furious because they were hearing this kind of talk for protecting me.
But if I lost my temper here, Iâd only be giving them an excuse to vent their anger.
Carl answered.
âOr maybe youâre the one addicted to anger. What changes if you cowardly drag Hildebert into a container and gang up on him?â
âAre you saying revenge has meaning? Next youâll tell us to forget the names of the fallen and just look forward!â
âIf you really thought it was unjust, you shouldâve protested up the chain.â
âThis is personal revenge.â
âIâve got nothing to say about this topic.â
Sophia said.
She was standing right in the middle of everyone.
As usual, the senior who wore a muted anger like a second skin rolled up her black sleeves.
âSo youâre just trying to pick a fight by calling it a juniorâs lynching.â
Her husky, icy voice echoed inside the container.
âSix of you ganging up on a junior because you donât have the guts to face him one-on-one. This is something that needs discipline tightened again.â
âDoes a single Badger take down a Creature on their own?!â
âYouâve forgotten everything.â
One of the unnamed Badgers muttered ominously.
âBoth the anger and the loss that once made you point a gun at the Commander-in-Chief.â
âYou donât need to hear things like this because of me.â
I said it before I could stop myself.
Eyes turned toward me. Sophia with her sleeves rolled up, the unfamiliar seniors wearing displeased expressions, even the two men standing at the threshold all turned to look at me.
I looked at Sophia and spoke in a subdued voice.
âIâll avoid it properly, Senior. Iâm still useful. I can get by without getting beaten even without help.â
âI donât need your help to discipline juniors either.â
Sophia turned away.
My eyes went wide.
But she didnât look back at me.
Instead, she called out to Ricardo, who was standing at the threshold.
âSenior.â
Ricardo answered by lifting one eyebrow, a smile playing on his lips.
âTake ~NĐŸvĐ”lđght~ Hilde out.â
âYeah....â
The green-eyed senior straightened his previously crooked posture.
âPlease wrap things up nicely~.â
Then Ricardo strode in and grabbed my arm firmly.
I made a startled sound, but he didnât even pretend to listen.
My body was yanked straight outside. While that was happening, Carl ignored my calls of âSenior? Seniors?â and stepped inside the threshold.
I heard the sound of him closing the container door behind me.
As Ricardo dragged me along, I looked back at the container, now tightly shut.
âWhat are the two of you staying behind to....â
âLater, make sure you thank Ayer once~. He told us your location....â
Huh?
I hadnât seen Ruta Ayer today at all.
I wanted to ask where heâd seen me, but it didnât seem like Ricardo would entertain my question.
The man walked briskly, gripping my arm tightly, his face expressionless.
I wish heâd let go of my arm.
I thought that as I followed obediently.
I knew it was an irrational fear, but the thought of what if I absorb him began to creep over me.
âRick. Please let go of my arm.â
I pleaded quietly.
âRicardo?â
The green-eyed senior rolled his eyes.
I didnât get an answer. His phone rang at that moment. It seemed like the caller was Ska. Despite having just used the title âaide,â the senior spoke on the phone with a surprising lack of formality.
While on the call, Ricardo loosened his grip, but he didnât let go completely.
The call didnât end until we reached the underground parking lot.
âAre you heading to the video center too, Rick?â
âNo....â
I thought he might be coming along, but apparently not.
I wondered if that was why Ska had called. But even after answering that way, Ricardo followed me all the way to my car. When we reached it, I felt his hand finally drop and let out a small sigh of relief.
I should thank him for walking me out.
I lifted my head, and the senior said,
âDoesnât seem like itâll spread outside the organization.... But internally, rumors are spreading faster than youâd think, so donât go following random seniors you donât know~.â
âYes.â
I answered immediately.
âDonât worry.â
I really have no intention of getting beaten up.
So I wished the seniors from the TF team wouldnât shield me. It didnât feel good seeing them hear things like that.
When I conveyed that sentiment, Ricardo rolled his eyes upward again.
âYeah~. Thatâs the Hildebert answer, all right....â
âAre you angry? But really, Iâm not affected by whatever people I donât even know say.â
âItâs just me getting worked up, thatâs all~.â
âMm. Senior, you shouldnât worry either. Opinions from people whose names I barely know donât matter. Theyâre not even skilled enough to be worth caring about.â
I meant it sincerely, but the seniorâs expression didnât ease.
Looking at him like that, I felt both apologetic and grateful at the same time. The TF seniors are genuinely good people. If they didnât truly care about me, they wouldnât be this stressed.
It almost feels like theyâre more stressed than I am....
Ricardo muttered, almost to himself.
âIf weâre being precise, I donât really have the right to get angry either, but....â
âYes?â
What is he talking about all of a sudden.
When I didnât understand, the man waved his hand dismissively.
Get in the car.
I hesitated and opened the driverâs door.
Seeing me waver, Ricardo snapped irritably,
âGet in~! Donât just stand there awkwardly....â
âYes. Um, Rick. Thank you for helping today. But Iâm really fine, so please donât worry too much.â
âSince the Colosseum, I donât believe it when you say youâre fine....â
Thatâs really unfair.
Thereâs nothing more meaningless to me than the opinions of people I havenât formed bonds with.
What did I even do at the Colosseum to lose his trust?
As I sat in the driverâs seat, I briefly retraced my memories.
Back when I hadnât yet remembered everything.
The mission where I first met Bobby and Asil.
The noisy stage and the vulgar audience.
The grotesque variety of Creatures the repulsive hosts kept parading out....
Huh?
Wait.
Among those Creatures back then,
as far as I remember....
âFuu!â
I shouted reflexively.
Ricardo, who had been stepping aside in front of the car, flinched at the sudden shout.
The senior looked down at me with an expression asking what the hell was wrong, then bent his eyes and looked at me sitting in the driverâs seat with the door open.
I smoothed my expression and met Ricardoâs gaze.
âRick, do you remember Fuu?!â
âWhat âfuuâ?â
Ricardo said, shoving his hands into his pockets.
âWhat are you talking about all of a sudden?â
***
I stopped by the video center to check the flower.
But half my mind was elsewhere. Even as I set a date to visit the video center together with the Emperor, my heart was impatient, my foot tapping sharply against the floor.
It had been a while since Iâd come to the center.
As expected, there was nothing new I discovered about the flower during this visit.
But remembering something else was enough.
I could see a small breakthrough. In high spirits, I contacted Yoow, Igor, Kairos, Rose, and Yun one after another.
And that night, for the first time, I entrusted Yoow with the Emperorâs escort.
Calling it an escort was an exaggerationâit was just asking him to sleep in the same cabin.
âPlease take care of it.â
After seeing Yoow off with a brief nod, I hurried straight to Kairosâs house.
The homeowner, along with Igor, Rose, and Yun, were waiting for me in silence.
I was grateful enough that they hadnât started fighting.
I slammed the front door shut.
âIâve figured out a method.â
I threw out the words without any preface.
Everyone stared straight at me.
âA way to confirm whether itâs the Emperor or Jaeyeon.â
The gazes grew heavier.
We went into the study.
A place unusually quiet compared to the rest. A room with a mahogany conference table so expensive it made you afraid to ask the price. As soon as I sat down at the center of that table, I laid out the plan Iâd come up with.
The plan was simple.
Present a mimicking Creature before the Emperor.
If we brought it before him, the Creature would perfectly imitate the Emperorâs appearance.
If he were the real Emperor, thereâd be no particular reaction.
Maybe heâd just say something like, âYouâre thinking of making a double with this? Do you really think thatâs a good idea?â
But if the Emperor were actually Jaeyeon, the reaction would be different.
With a very high probability, a negative one.
âWhat was it called again?â
I asked, looking at Kairos.
âThat monster. The high-tier ones imitate their targetâs appearance pretty faithfully, donât they?â
âThatâs right.â
The tamer answered with a dubious expression.
âAt least the appearance. As for the voice, it can only mimic the sounds the target makes, like a parrot.... Hilde. Do you really think this will work?â
âItâs an idiotic plan.â
That was Igorâs assessment.
âJust as idiotic as that carrot-something plan. The Captain has a strange talent for coming up with shoddy plans.â
âBut it worked that time too.â
Iâd expected this reaction.
I took it without flinching and shot back,
âThe simpler the plan, the better.â
âThatâs amazing, Captain!â
Rose clasped both hands together and jumped into the conversation.
âSo all I have to do is catch that monster, right?!â
âYeah. Thatâs why I called you. If possible, ones with a higher tier. I thought it might be easier to capture them if you go with Kairos.â
âWell.... Itâs not a particularly hard monster to catch, so if you tell me to, I can bring back as many as you want.... But Iâm not that familiar with shapeshifters, so Iâm not sure whether this will really work.â
âI told you itâs idiotic.â
âItâs not bad.â
Yun spoke up abruptly.
The man who had shown no movement or sound until now suddenly asserted his presence. Everyone turned their heads toward Yun at once.
I relaxed my face.
âRight?â
âDecent enough. If itâs Jaeyeon, there will definitely be a reaction.â
How satisfying.
The one who had spent nearly fifty years searching for ways to screw Jaeyeon over was Choi Yun.
There was nothing more reliable than his evaluation.
Grinning, I turned to Igor.
As I endured Igorâs incredulous stare, Yun added,
âAt the very least, it wonât fail. As long as you put a well-crafted Creature in front of him.â
âExactly, right? Thank you. Thatâs what I thought.â
âYeah. But if youâre going to use that method, go all the way.â
âPardon?â
âDonât approach it lightly, just thinking about confirming whether itâs Jaeyeon or the Emperor. Plan it with the resolve that if it is Jaeyeon, youâll drag whatâs inside all the way out.â
After saying that, Yun straightened his posture and sat properly in his chair.
The indifferent expression heâd been wearing the whole time since entering the study vanished completely. Sitting upright, the sniper leaned his upper body forward.
Yun stared at me as if piercing straight through my eyes.
âIâve got a plan inspired by your idea. Listen carefully.â
âYes.â
âFirst, catch Mongmong on sight.â
â...What?â
What the hell is Mongmong.
When I made a blank face, Yun repeated himself.
âCatch at least fifty Mongmong.â
âMongmong?â
âThe mimicking Creature you were talking about.â
âThatâs called Mongmong?â
Mongmong?
âYeah. Mongmong.â
That thingâs name is Mongmong?
***
And so the operation later named the Double Mong Plan began to roll forward.
Aside from waiting, there wasnât much for me to do.
Of course, that didnât mean I truly had nothing to do.
From the start, there was one thing I absolutely had to do before putting the plan into action.
Show the flower.
Use the Emperorâs knowledge to grasp the enemyâs movements.
Week two of the escort.
At last, I left the cabin together with the Emperor and headed for the video center.
Once inside the restricted zone, I showed him the flower without any back-and-forth. I already knew the Emperor wouldnât refuse. Kissing my foot had been a kind of small contract.
A promise to give each other what we wanted.
True to that, the Emperor carefully examined the data filling the controlled area.
Only after letting the videos and photographs linger in his eyes for a long while did he finally speak.
ăI know.ă
It was a voice whose inner thoughts were unreadable.
ăWhat Kysis desperately coaxed into bloom.ă