Luke stared at his red-haired classmate, whose expression was impossible to read.
They were walking out of the water. Nana had been taken to the medical tent by the instructors, and the sea had grown calm again.
Jack turned his head.
The classmate who had shown that strange sight moments earlier.
After confirming that Nana had safely reached land, Luke had slipped back into the night sea and found Jack.
But he hadnât found only him.
There had also been a lifeform in the waterâbeautiful in a way that was almost oppressive, glowing brilliantly.
And Jack Black had been floating before that large creature emitting a blue fluorescent light.
There was no way they could have spoken, and neither side had made any discernible sound.
Yet, for some reason, Luke had the uncanny feeling that Jack had conversed with it.
It had been quite a while since heâd seen a cartoon where someone talked to fish.
Anyway, after sending the large thing away and returning to the surface with him, Jack had looked to be in quite a good moodâonly to suddenly have his expression stiffen. Luke had no choice but to ask.
âAre you hurt?â
âAh. No.â
Jack brushed back his wet red hair.
âA bad thought crossed my mind for a moment. Nothingâs wrong.â
â...If you say so.â
Is he the type to suddenly have bad thoughts?
The Jack Black Luke knew wasnât much different from Black-Jack, the star driver shown in the media. Polite, positive, confident in his ability.
He had excellent instincts and an indescribable presence that drew attention even when he simply stood still.
So this is what a superstar is like, Luke had once thought.
It didnât seem like the kind of person who would suddenly fall into negative thoughts.
Since Jack himself said it was nothing, Luke didnât press further.
As they walked toward the beach, only the sound of water parting around them echoed.
Only after the sensation of water wrapping around his ankles faded did Luke ask,
âWhat were you doing back there?â
The red-haired classmate, who had seemed lost in thought, turned his head.
Orange eyes stared at him.
âHe asked me to let him hear my heartbeat.â
Jack whispered softly, loud enough only for Luke to hear.
âDid you hear it too?â
Luke hadnât.
And what did he â NĐŸvĐ”lÎčght â (Read the full story) mean, asked to hear it?
Thinking he would ask more later, Luke headed toward the medical barracks.
***
Yun, Yehyeon, Ricardoâthey must have understood what I conveyed.
A flicker of unease rose in me.
They were intelligent people. I hadnât worried until now.
But as the moment to actually carry things out approached, unnecessary concern began to sprout.
Of course, there was no turning back.
From here, events would begin to roll forward. If things went according to plan, Colton would receive my message that I had no intention of stopping my revenge. And then the hunt that would not cease would begin.
Even so, he would avoid touching our kin as much as possible.
He knew well that one should always leave the enemy a final hole to surrender through.
And so, I had chosen to risk the humans I cared about in order to pursue vengeance for my kin.
What a trash junior I am.
Most of the seniors had no idea what choice I had made.
When the truth came out, I would surely face gazes mixed with betrayal and disgust.
I was already prepared for that.
Ricardo must have felt betrayed as wellâyet I was grateful he hadnât expressed it.
How could he not feel that way? I was effectively dragging them into danger to avenge the dead.
Rick didnât even care much for our kind....
If Rei had been alive, perhapsâjust as Colton saidâI might have abandoned revenge.
I cherished the bonds I had formed here that much.
But Rei was dead.
...By my hand.
Even so, as long as Colton was one of the humans who had driven me to kill Rei, I had no intention of stopping.
If Kyle heard this, he would call me a deceiver.
He wouldnât be wrong.
But letâs set that aside for now.
Itâs not as if you can step in and stab Colton to death yourself.
âThis way, please.â
Surrounded by CIS agents, I boarded a black van.
It looked like the kind used by celebrities.
It was, in fact, a transport vehicle.
Men in suits filled the seats on either side of me and in front.
Conway boarded last and shut the door. Once the space was sealed, he walked to a black case placed behind the driverâs seat.
He removed a syringe wrapped in transparent plastic.
âItâs a sedative.â
After tearing open the wrapping, Conway showed the needle and then inserted it into the inner elbow of the agent sitting diagonally across from me.
âAs you can see, it is harmless to the human body.â
âTry handling your subordinates more gently.â
I muttered in disbelief as the agent fell into a deathlike sleep the moment the injection was administered.
âAnd I donât feel like taking that. You expect me to accept a sedative quietly in a vehicle full of enemies whoâd love to take my head?â
âWe cannot allow you to see where weâre going.â
âThere arenât even any windows.â
âThere is a front windshield.â
Good grief.
The vehicle started moving.
No one flinched.
I sighed at Conway, who stood over me with the syringe in hand.
âIf you insist, just blindfold me.â
âVery well.â
Anthony Conway was not foolish enough to force the needle in unnecessarily.
He knew full well that even in handcuffs, I could subdue everyone inside this vehicle.
âAnd since Green Dream does not affect you, we will have no choice but to use another compound in its place.â
âIâm not fond of that.â
While the agent beside me rose and retrieved a black cloth from the case, Conway picked up another syringe.
A narcotic, perhaps.
âIâll behave until I meet the Child who ordered my arrest. Do you really need to inject me?â
âIf you decided to, you could cause an accident and eliminate us at any moment. Our corpses would serve as excellent nourishment for you.â
âIf I had that intention, Iâd have done it already.â
âHildebert.â
Conway called my name.
When I lifted my head, he took a laptop from the case and adjusted the screen to my eye level.
âThen we start with Kairos.â
On the screen, in the draft folder, was an article exposing Kairosâs identity.
There were no illicit photographsâjust neatly itemized points that could raise suspicion: educational history, the absence of parents, details that could ignite speculation.
The moment it was uploaded, the internet would burn.
You donât need to put a gun to Kairosâs head to threaten him.
Conway pressed a key and showed other files.
âThese are individuals we have begun to observe.â
Asil. Tom. Hesh. Ricardo. Jonathan. Sophia. Carl.
It felt like reopening Yoowâs stalking fileâthe one Kairos and I had once seen.
I couldnât hold back a sigh.
âFine.â
The moment I agreed, Conway tore open the wrapping on the syringe.
âYouâre doing all this to obtain immortality? Youâre impressive.â
âYou wouldnât understand.â
He inserted the needle into my arm.
Nausea crashed over me.
In a voice that sounded almost like a murmur to himself, he spokeâhuman, for the first time.
Regret. Deprivation. Anger.
âEven if you did, you forgot long ago.â
I didnât bother asking what he meant.
***
Don Child had no choice but to take me to a CIS interrogation room.
If he had any sense.
Every other option carried risk.
Put me on a fishing boat and head out to sea? Colton would clap his hands at the opportunity and sink both Don Child and me together.
Somehow make it outside the Core? Colton would drop a missile and accomplish two things at once.
The situation was similar elsewhere.
Thus, only one option remained.
A social institution Colton could not recklessly crushâyet one filled with loyal men and weapons ready to subdue me at any time.
CIS headquarters.
Child and I both desired the otherâs throat.
But his ultimate goal was immortality.
Mine was the information CIS possessed.
So there was no conflict until I entered the building.
The drug makes me nauseous.
Even so, I walked obediently under the agentsâ grip.
The texture beneath my feet changed from soil to marble.
After walking across marble for some time, the air shifted. I entered a room filled with artificially crisp air.
It reminds me of a laboratory.
Clank!
Heavier chains were fastened around my wrists and ankles.
That brought back older memories.
Much older.
I pushed the rising recollections aside and focused on my senses.
Only after the door shut did Conway remove the blindfold.
A vast white space appeared before me.
The chains attached to my wrists and ankles lay across the floor like massive serpents.
In the corner of the white wall was a huge ventilation shaft that looked as if it could spew smoke at any moment.
Behind it, I sensed a Creature.
Ashen Mantle.
âSo we meet.â
So CIS had confined an Ashen Mantle and used it for interrogations.
After a small note of admiration, I looked at Don Child.
He appeared slightly older than in the photo Erich Erhart had shown me.
Likely from exhaustion.
But not retired.
Don Child radiated the presence of a seasoned mercenary.
Even from his profile, I had thought he resembled my master.
In person, the resemblance was even stronger.
âI didnât expect you to come so quietly. As rumored, you are arrogant. Laying groundwork to fake your death, perhaps. Your social status and reputation must be restricting your freedom of movement.â
Don spoke.
I smiled at the motionless, sharp-featured middle-aged man.
âThatâs right.â
His eyes, worn by the cruelty of the world, resembled my masterâs.
Humanity shaved down by lifeâs pressures. Sharpened against misfortune until damaged.
My master, however, had hit rock bottom and eventually drifted into a shabby rural shrine.
There, as its guardian, he had lived a somewhat peaceful life before passing on.
Though one rustic child who kept charging at the blades he himself had honed must have been terribly annoying.
Still, I remember him gradually regaining something human.
An anecdote so old that a breath could scatter its dust.
Irrelevant now.
Don had traveled too far to be redeemed.
âIâm sorry, but your son will not achieve immortality.â
I spoke gently.
âIâve heard that even if you pour healing power into that childâs body, nothing will change. Both Spitfire and Sukhoi told me that.â
âShut up.â
Don replied coldly.
âYou saw the laptop. Youâre not in a position to speak to me.â
âYou going to kill me right away?â
He snorted.
âThe moment I point a gun at you, my head will roll. I know well enough that youâre that kind of monsterâeven without your sword.â
âThen what will you do? Keep me here and hand me over to Colton?â
I truly wanted to know.
âJust store me?â
âIâve conducted interrogations and torture until I was sick of it.â
So have I.
âDo you know the core of it?â
âYou leave hope.â
I smiled faintly.
Just as Colton leaves our kin untouched for nowâleaving me the chance to surrender.
âYou leave room to believe it isnât the worst yet.â
âCorrect. That is what I intend.â
Don sighed as he explained.
He had probably been a good man, at some point.
âIâll torture and interrogate you, but I wonât kill you.â
He looked at me.
âYou understand what that means, Hildebert? Live holding onto the hope that you might strike back during the gap between torture and interrogationâuntil you die.â
Slowly dry me out.
A clever man.
Placed in the position of doing what Colton would have done.
Even as I thought that, I couldnât stop the corner of my mouth from curling upward.
It wonât take long to escape.
I should leave before I grow too weak from not eating.
***
Two days passed.
âHilde.â
At Donâs voice, I lifted my head slightly from the cold floor.
âWater.â
Drip, drip.
Bottled water spilled onto the floor nearby.
I watched it form a shallow puddle.
I should escape today.
I decided before crawling over to lap it up.
This is the right timing.
Before me stood familiar faces.
â...Rick! Ami!â
How good to see them.
âHave you been well?â