So Iâd been sleep-talking again.
Blood rushed to my face.
Kai was leaning over the railing on the second floor. For some reason, Ricardo was standing beside my bed. Kairos had pushed himself halfway upright and was looking at me, and Yun was there too.
This is... a lot of pressure.
Fortunately, when I jabbed my elbow into the mattress and raised my upper body, everyone politely averted their gaze.
âIâm sorry.â
I muttered the apology.
âWas I sleep-talking? Did I wake everyone up because of that?â
âYou werenât that loud.â
Kai, sitting on the second floor, answered.
âGo back to sleep.â
âNo. Iâve slept enough.â
âItâs six in the morning. If youâre not sleeping, at least lie down for an hour and a half.â
Yun muttered as he lay back down on his bed.
Maybe he was exhaustedâhis eyes were already closed. His face was tinted by the dim light of the small battery-powered night lamp.
With his eyes still shut, my mentor said,
âTurn off the night light when you go upstairs.â
Ricardo gave my shoulder a light tap, switched off the lamp, and went back up.
I didnât even get a chance to ask anything. I turned my head to ask Kairos, but he happened to be yawning, so I couldnât bring myself to speak.
After yawning, the summoner just smiled faintly and lay back down.
In the end, I had no choice but to lie down too.
I thought I wouldnât be able to sleep, but once I did, drowsiness crept in again. I only woke up when I heard the alarm.
It wasnât coming from the menâs sleeping quarters.
It seemed Ami had brought an old-fashioned analog alarm clock from headquarters.
âChoi Ami. Turn off the alarm.â
Yun banged on the wall with a thud.
Badgers were groggily getting up.
This place had atrocious soundproofing. I could hear movement in the next room, and the clatter as Ami knocked the alarm over while turning it off.
Cold air wrapped around my body.
Today, Iâm definitely going out.
With that resolve, I started my second day.
***
âBut how did the Commander suppress all the complaints?â
Breakfast duty was Ami.
Dipping bread into the warm sweet-pumpkin soup she had made, she asked the question. We were all seated at the table, bundled up in layers of clothing.
The seniors lifted their heads from their steaming plates.
The one who answered was Kai.
âThey all got chewed out. As a group.â
Huh?
âLooked like he dumped every bitter thing heâd been holding back.â
âDid he tear into the Badgers?â
âThey got scrubbed hard.â
Ami nodded and added,
âThey lined up, did roll call, attention, bowed their heads, and got blasted while standing there. You were probably the only one who didnâtâsince you were busy dragging out the guy Hilde beat up.â
âOh. Did Yun handle that?â
âIf I didnât, who else would?â
Yun replied flatly.
âBecause of that, I missed seeing Trevain. Probably wouldâve been worth watching.â
âSenior Trevain got chewed out too?â
âEveryone who was there got it.â
Sophia said indifferently.
âFelt like something thatâd been building finally burst.â
For some reason, the anger in her voice felt... thinner.
Even though they were talking about Yehyeon, there was no particular emotion mixed into Sophiaâs tone. I couldnât tell whether she was putting on a calm front or if her feelings had genuinely cooled.
Of course, I didnât ask out loud which it was.
Instead, after swallowing a piece of warm bread, I asked,
âWhat did he say?â
âHe told them to complain only after theyâre pulling their weight like Hildebert.â
...Wow.
I stared, mouth hanging open.
Kai kept explaining, one point after another.
âHe also said that if you were all as capable as Hildebert, he wouldnât even be paying this much attention to Hildebert in the first place.â
â...My god.â
âHe said it was natural to have questions about hiring someone through a special recruitment process, so heâd set aside time for Q&Aâbut that he hadnât come out there to listen to complaints.â
Ami said, sipping her cocoa.
I was frozen in my seat, forgetting to eat altogether.
Wow.
Good thing I stormed out in anger.
The atmosphere wouldâve completely collapsed otherwise.
âHe also asked why it was you who thought you got to decide whether to trust a specific Badger or not~.... Said, logically, donât you think I have more information than you do.... Or is it that youâre questioning my judgment, and Iâm just too dense to pick up on it?â
âThatâs terrifying.â
âAt the end, he asked exactly what the problem was.â
Ami wrapped up the explanation calmly.
âUnusual recruitment? He said Hilde is fully qualified, working exemplary in practice, and itâs not like there have never been special hires beforeâso whatâs the issue? Non-human background? He stood on humanityâs side in the First War, and Iâve judged thereâs no chance of betrayalâso where exactly is the problem in that?â
âDid he raise his voice...?â
âThatâs what made it scarierâhe didnât.â
Ami licked the cocoa off her lips.
âAnd it wasnât just about Hilde. Felt like he was letting out things heâd been holding back. He said heâd let the recklessness of believing internal rumors slide this time.â
âSenior Trevain mustâve completely lost it.â
That man had gone there to complain about Yehyeon.
Instead of getting to vent properly, he just got chewed out alongside his juniors. There was no way he wasnât in a foul mood.
Kai seemed to understand what I meant and snorted softly.
âSo he got chewed out a second time.â
â...What?â
âOnce the leadership and Director Ju left, Trevain started cracking down on the lower ranks.â
Unbelievable.
This time, I forgot to eat because I was dumbfounded. When I made a face that clearly said what on earth is wrong with him, Kai stretched his smile.
âBasically, he was venting.â
âThank you for your hard work....â
I muttered, thinking of the Badgers who had come to defend me, only to get torn apart by their superior and then chewed out again by a senior.
âThat mustâve been a rough evening.â
âNot something to grumble about in front of you.â
Kai said calmly, then resumed eating his breakfast.
As if prompted by his words, people glanced at my expression one by one.
As I forced a bitter smile, Ami set down her empty cocoa cup and added,
âRight. And honestly, it felt kind of refreshing.â
The small senior stood up and poured me a cup of cocoa too.
Meanwhile, the others rose from their seats in a rush.
One look told me they were getting ready to head out. I hurriedly stood up as well, but Ricardoâs hand stopped me cold.
âYou can sit back and take it easy~.â
âSenior, thatâs really not fair.â
âSomeone has to stay behind anyway. If something happens, someone needs to go to the comms room and contact headquarters. If the generator acts up, someone has to deal with it. We need someone to do the dishes, take out the trash, and prep lunch.â
I listened to Yun rattle off tasks in his dry tone, eyes widening.
Thatâs... actually a lot to do.
In that case, I couldnât complain. They werenât leaving me behind for no reason.
But still....
âI donât really have the knowledge to deal with generator failures....â
âIâll teach you the basics. Come with me.â
Yun dropped the bomb and walked straight out of the cafeteria.
âYouâre not so stupid that you canât memorize a response plan.â
And so, I really did learn emergency generator procedures in a crash course.
Fortunately, Yun had brought a manual. He said heâd scribbled it roughly so that even an idiot who didnât know which law of thermodynamics was which could follow it.
The explanation was actually very clear, so I clutched the manual like a lifeline.
If the generator failed, weâd have to evacuate the base immediately. It was basically our lifeline. If, at that moment, the portal malfunctioned too and we couldnât withdraw, Yun said grimly, this place would turn into a mass grave.
âWouldnât it be safer if I went out and you stayed behind, Senior?â
âIf I see any sign of trouble, Iâll stay and send you out immediately.â
My mentor replied indifferently.
âFor now, itâs fine for a few days. If the stay drags on, thatâs another story. Just finish your tasks before we get back.â
After saying that firmly, he listed everything I needed to do.
He even assigned extra tasks for if I had spare timeâchecking the baseâs supplies, sorting out what was still usable, that sort of thing.
âMake sure lunch is at least edible.â
Iâm not that bad at cooking.
When we roasted that land-whale before, everyone ate it just fine.
In any case, once again, the seniors headed out onto the glacier, dark as night. It was morning, but without any sunlight, it felt like perpetual night.
Badgers stepping outside the base with flashlights in hand, wearing clothes that weighed close to ten kilograms.
After seeing them off, I returned to the cafeteria to wash dishes.
And so the second day passed with me stuck in the base, doing odd jobs all day.
Still, having work to do made me feel better.
If I kept my body busy and my mind occupied, I wouldnât sink inward.
âHilde, youâre really good at housekeeping.â
Four hours later, Ami came back with her nose red from the cold and widened her eyes at the neatly sorted trash and supplies.
âWas the cabin this organized too?â
âIt was a lot smaller, for one.â
I sliced the whole roast pig neatly for distribution to the seniors.
âIf thereâs anything you need, please tell me. Iâll prioritize looking for that in the supplies. Thereâs a lot more usable stuff than I expected.â
The second day passed peacefully like that.
***
The third day was much the same.
The difference was that the seniors, after moving tirelessly for three days, finally reached the Ice Dragon.
That said, the day ended with them merely setting up bamboo poles near it. They couldnât do anything to actually wake the Ice Dragon. Apparently, the moment they got close, the blizzard became too violent.
âSeems like thereâs always a blizzard around the Ice Dragon.â
âThrowing something to wake it probably wonât work.â
The siblings explained while drinking coffee.
The moment I heard that, I lifted my head.
âShould I go and send out a sword strike?â
âSo the glacier cracks open, the bamboo poles we barely planted fall into the gaps, and we get lost in the dark?â
Yunâs immediate rebuttal made me droop sadly.
There wasnât a single illogical part to it. I had nothing to argue back with....
Gloomily, I stirred the soup with a ladle.
Sophia approached, pulling off her gloves.
âThe apron suits you.â
She offered a small consolation.
I replied miserably,
âThank you.... What should I make for breakfast tomorrow?â
âCoffee, toast, and butter.â
âI want cocoa!â
âWeâll eat breakfast, head out, and wake it around noon.â
Yun declared, setting his cup down.
The Badgers stopped eating and drinking.
His dry, dark gaze found Kairosâs orange eyes.
âIf you bring a megaphone, youâre confident you can shout loud enough.â
âYes.â
Using bombs or approaching to stab it was too risky, so theyâd decided to wake the Ice Dragon with noise.
It had been one of the options from the start, and Kairos seemed to think it would work.
He planned to shout in the Imperial language.
Well. Itâs not like a dragon has bad hearing.
Even if the constant wind around it sounded like ASMR.
âThen Iâll just shout louder.â
âThe Ice Dragon is huge!â
Ami shouted optimistically beside Kairos.
âItâs like thereâs a massive hill there! Itâs curled up, so it looks even bigger!â
On the third night, Kairos woke me again.
I thought Iâd slept quietly on the second night. Fortunately, on the third night, only Kairos was awake. I couldnât tell whether the others were pretending to â NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t â (Only on NĐŸvĐ”lŃgÒ»t) sleep out of consideration for me, or if they were just too exhausted to wake up.
Either way, the summoner gently shook me awake, smiled, and then immediately crawled back under the blanket.
âSorry.â
When I whispered that, Kairos pulled a hand out from under the blanket and fluttered it lightly.
The noisy alarm from the next room woke us again on the fourth day.
The day we would wake the Ice Dragon.
***
After breakfast, the seniors headed out with their radios.
They said theyâd contact us if anything happened.
I was ordered to stay in the portal zoneâtold to be ready with my sword, since we didnât know what might happen.
So I barely finished cleaning up after breakfast before waiting in the portal zone.
Amiâs voice came through the radio.
[Itâs gone!]
Hearing her voice, mixed with shock and confusion, my eyes widened.
âWhat?â
[The hill is gone! The Ice Dragon vanished in an instant! It was definitely here just three seconds ago!]
âWhat? Where could... you mean that massive thing?â
[Yeah! Itâs gone! The blizzard surged and then it just disappeared!]
[It didnât go far.]
As if trying to calm us down, Kairosâs voice suddenly cut in.
[Nearbyâ.]
Thud.
Something hit the ground.
The sound came from the corridor.
At the same time as that heavy sound, the radio cut off. I snapped my head up and stared down the corridor without moving.
Somethingâs here.
My instincts didnât flare, but the sharpened senses Iâd honed were still there.
Something is in the corridor....
The Ice Dragon?
I moved toward the door, silencing my footsteps.
After readying myself to dash, I peered into the corridor.
A hallway with only a single light on, to conserve power.
At the far end of it, someone was standing.
â...A child?â