Dozens of drones illuminated the Black Badgers standing on the front line.
Most of the people in Center Core were probably watching the footage being relayed by those drones. The video quality was poor. The images kept cutting out under the attacks of the rampaging humanoid Creature. Even when the signal didnât drop, the whipping winds and unidentifiable attacks made it hard to watch.
So much so that some viewers gave up because of eye strain.
On top of that, most of the drones lost signal at crucial moments.
Yehyeon must be pulling strings.
Watching the footage transmitted by his own drones, Erich Erhart thought as much. Reclining lazily in an armchair, he took in the countless images spread across the screens.
The past of the Titans known as Hildebert and Cecil was not being broadcast to the public.
Instead, only the repeated scenes of Badgers desperately trying to reach Cecil were shown.
Theyâve improved in the meantime.
Erhart let a faint smile form.
Yehyeon had finally learned how to spin a story that resonated with the masses.
Back then, he used to hold the naĂŻve belief that honesty itself was persuasive.
It seemed that years spent among the upper leadership had taught him something.
With production quality like this, it would be more than enough to respond to Colton Wisemanâs counterattack.
[Hilde!]
The youngest daughter of the Choi family crossed the monitor holding a small Badger.
Her words were hard to make out clearly, drowned beneath the overwhelming torrent of Titan attacks.
[-Go! ...Right now... push...!]
Still, her eyes were vivid.
The desperation of those on the front line, bearing the brunt of the attacks, was captured clearly.
Hildebertâs repeated attempts.
Whatever emotion his desperation sprang from, Hildebertâs refusal to bend shook the hearts of Center Coreâs citizens.
And that would become his shield.
Erich Erhart would make it so.
âSo you became a hero in the end.â
As he murmured leisurely, Shashinsky let out a sigh.
âFalcon wonât stay idle. He knows this is a fight where lives are on the line, so heâll try to crush him by any means necessary.â
âTrue. The blood purge will start again soon. They must have realized long ago that I joined hands with Prometheusâso perhaps this time, Iâll actually die.â
He laughed calmly, drawing sharp looks from his followers.
As always, Erhart brushed off their wordless reproach.
Instead, he savored the opera unfolding in real time.
After indulging for a while in a story that fit his tastes all too perfectly, he spoke again.
âWhether itâs the end or not, a fight fought hand in hand with Prometheus will be unbearably enjoyable.â
Stories were only ever interesting when death constantly circled above the charactersâ heads.
That rule didnât change even if he himself became one of those characters.
âIt would be nice to win, but if we lose, so be it. Iâll be counting on you until the festivalâs end.â
âPlease at least resolve yourself to win.â
âIs that really necessary? Even without resolve, I fully intend to do my very best.â
First, he would begin by turning Hildebert into a hero.
The Elder observed the battle, already thinking through the stories he would weave next.
***
It didnât hurt as much as expected.
Noâthere was almost no pain at all.
Only after realizing that, instead of pain, he felt the warmth of another person did he sense that something was wrong.
Carl quickly lifted his head.
Then he noticed the blood soaking his body.
The warmth of the liquid spread across his skin.
âSenior...â
Carl spoke in a hoarse voice.
Jinâs eyes rolled.
Focus slowly returned to his fading gaze. Carl saw Jinâs lips curve into an arcâa gentle smile, soft yet powerless.
A chill spread through his gut as Carl lowered his eyes.
He saw the holes in Jinâs heart [N O V E L I G H T] and side.
Ah.
Amid the ruin riddled with holes, Carl Dow knew instinctively.
This couldnât be undone.
Even a Black Badgerâs enhanced body couldnât heal wounds like these. Carl had served long enough to know exactly when a Black Badger faced an irreversible death.
That realization came as instinct.
This time too, Carl felt it. Jin was dying.
Because he had shielded Carl and the office worker.
The Ice Dragon had been right. Jin was fated to lose his life in the middle of summer.
Yet, just as the Ice Dragon said, Jinâs intervention had shifted fate off its original course.
Carl didnât know when Jin had run over.
âRelax your face....â
Leaning against Carlâs arm, Jin murmured.
âIâve... lived long enough....â
Carl was left speechless.
Rebuttals flared up in his mind. That they werenât that far apart in age. That he himself had lived long too. And what did living long even have to do with anything?
None of it left his mouth.
âThank you for your hard work.â
Instead, he offered a heavy bow.
âI learned so much from you, Senior.â
âFor what....â
âHey!â
A sharp shout rang out from behind Jin.
When Carl looked up, he saw two seniors sprinting toward them at full speed.
Chen Koenig and Jason Trevain.
They were drenched in blood, yet untouched by deathâs shadow. Carl saw Chen frantically pull a blood injection from his pocket. Jason Trevain, who arrived first, grabbed Jinâs shoulder and checked his wounds.
The blond seniorâs face twisted mercilessly.
âWhat the hell were you doing?â
The sharp question burst from his mouth.
âDid you run off and come back just to die?â
Jin gave a short laugh.
âGot it right.â
The Badger who had once deserted spoke with effort.
âThat was the plan.... I came back to die as a Badger. Not to die alone out there as a deserter....â
Carl clenched his teeth.
He knew well that Jin Silver had been a model Badger before his desertion. Saying he learned a lot from him was no exaggeration. There was a reason Jin had been called the Badgerâs druid.
The man who grew remarkably lush vegetables in the ruins beyond the Core.
Chen snapped.
âHey! Then why the hell did you get a prosthetic arm?!â
Carl heard Chenâs voice tremble faintly. The unused blood injection hung limply in the seniorâs hand.
Jin smiled again.
âIâm not a deserter anymore.... Iâll be treated as a Badger who fell in action, right?â
A dangerous bubbling crept into his voice.
Carl strained his ears, unwilling to miss a single word.
âRunning away halfway through.... I can be forgiven now, canât I?â
That was his last line.
Carl wanted to say there was no need to ask for forgivenessâthat he had always thought of Jin as a great Badger.
But before he could, Jin Silverâs breathing stopped.
May you rest peacefully.
Sitting amid guilt, gratitude, and grief tangled together, Carl offered a silent farewell.
Was your life a happy one?
Even if he asked, there would be no answer.
Jin Silverâs peers unleashed a stream of curses.
Listening to their rage, Carl carefully laid the stiffening body down on the ground.
After closing Jinâs eyes, he turned his gaze to the civilian he had protected.
The office worker was crying silently.
âIâm sorry.â
âLive on.â
Carl replied shortly.
âThatâs enough.â
Without another word, he resumed the rescue work.
He picked up debris without sparing a glance at the sky growing bright once more.
***
Cecilâs elbow had turned pitch black.
The discoloration that started at her fingers had crept all the way up to her elbow.
Fragments even fell away from her hand. Yet even as her body burned, her magical ability did not falterâonce again, Cecil fired light spells into the sky.
PABABABABANG!
I cut through the deluge with a stomach-churning feeling.
Bounced off the tendrils, I found myself back on the ground, looking up at her.
In the meantime, Iâd learned her attack patterns, increasing my hit rate. Even so, I was still busy just blocking the endless barrage.
This canât keep going.
Watching the grand mageâs mana circuits spin faster instead of slowing, I steeled myself.
If the next attempt showed no change, Iâd start absorbing too.
Iâd been told that Jin had fallen.
At first, Gilbert hadnât wanted to say it. But the moment he saw my fearâassuming Carlâs death as a givenâhe told me the truth.
Carl lived thanks to Jin.
Jin was killed in action.
The civilian Jin had protected was safe.
For now.
They were still conducting rescue operations with support from Trevain and Koenig.
âSupport on that side?â
[Iâm watching it. Focus only on Cecil.]
âYes. Igor. Yoow. Iâll try climbing the tendrils one more time. If that fails, Iâll start absorbing too.â
âCaptain.â
[Wait.]
Igor turned to me with a serious expression, and Yoow responded just as quickly.
I brushed off my subordinatesâ reactions and moved to sprint toward the tendrils.
But Yoow spoke faster.
[You havenât tried that yet!]
âI told you I canât use aura. I canât even be sure what I saw was aura....â
[Not auraâCaptain, you imitate Lord Kysisâs swordsmanship flawlessly!]
The strategist shouted.
[You practiced Kysisâs swordsmanship over and over in the Empireâdonât think I didnât know! Drag Cecil down and use that swordsmanship to drive the blade in!]
Ah.
[That irregular sword styleâitâs more than distinctive enough!]
I recalled Kysisâs swordsmanship.
And, reluctantly, I had to agree with the strategist.
It was worth a try.
Just once more.
***
[Jin Silver has fallen.]
Yehyeon received the report from his subordinate.
[He was killed by a 10th-class Creature. There are no additional fatalities yet.]
He closed his eyes.
And didnât move for a moment.
He thought about the catastrophe that had unfolded overnight.
About his own mistakes, and how to prevent the missteps he might yet make.
He knew Cecil bore no malice.
This was like a natural disaster. But too many people had died. If Cecil wasnât stopped, there would be more victims. He had to stop it, no matter what.
They couldnât repeat the First War.
The final battle of the First War was still a scar upon all humanity. It left an entire generation traumatized. That was why daily life had halted not only in Center Core, but in other Cores as well.
If things escalated that farâand if Hildebert failed to stop itâsociety would surely turn cruel toward them.
It has to be stopped.
Knowing he could no longer fully protect his subordinates, Yehyeon was desperate.
Even though so much had already happened.
The front line hadnât collapsed yet. There was still hope.
âSordi.â
âYes.â
âHilde said weâd only get in the way, but....â
Fortunately, most civilians in the surrounding area had already evacuated.
Thanks to field operatives nearbyâRicardo Sordi, Jonathan Kudo, Tom Husson, and othersâenemy ëì had been handled.
Theyâd cut down Creatures one after another amid the chaos, so casualties from Creatures were relatively low.
Among the Badgers who contributed to stabilizing the situation, the one with the best command was Ricardo Sordi.
Yehyeon gave the order.
âStill, gather the nearby Badgers and move to the front.â
âUnderstood.â
âPrioritize searching for the missing, but if Hilde requests anything, support him.â
Yehyeon knew this decision could become a blunder, but he sent the Badgers anyway.
He couldnât entrust everything solely to those already at the vanguard.
âDonât step too far forwardââ
At that moment, the communicator chimed.
He thought it would be Ska or Gilbert, but instead, another familiar voice leapt into his ear.
[Commander.]
It was Hildebert.
[Requesting support.]
The golden-eyed swordsman said that as many Badgers as possible were needed.