âIâm still unsure about your decision, Duke Henna.â
Like all the other rooms in Beldeve, the Dukeâs office was made without a single window to prevent a dragonâs breath from affecting the insides. Sina didnât like such rooms in Beldeve; the large stones felt as heavy as the history of the eastern territory.
âYou suddenly requested a meeting, and youâre telling me that youâre unsure? Tell me, what are you so unsure about, knight?â
While Hela had certainly been informed of Sinaâs name by Horhell, she didnât bother calling Sina by her name. Helaâs attitude toward Sina was cold in contrast to her attitude toward Juan. However, Sina wasnât discouraged.
âJuan is not a trustworthy man. Every place he passed by turned into ruinsâTantil, the Ash Tower, Hiveden, Durgal⊠all of them. He is strong, and he doesnât hesitate to wield hatred in order to fulfill his purpose,â Sina said.
âSo?â Hela raised her eyebrows.
âJuan might even use Beldeve as a stepping stone to achieve his purpose. I do not think that he joined the punishment unit without any goals, considering that itâs a group composed of those who have been encroached upon by the Crack.â
âYou sure donât know a lot of things. As expected of a novice knight.â
â...Your Grace, I might be too young and lacking in experience, sure, but I think I can confidently say that I know more about Juan than you do. I have been chasing him from Tantil all the way here. His identity is alsoâŠâ
Sina was about to talk about Juanâs identity in detail, but shut her mouth; she had a feeling that it might have huge repercussions. It was no joking matter to bring up a story about how the respected emperor of the empire had come back for revenge with a sword in his hand.
âThen what do you think is the right thing for me to do, knight? Would it be best for me to restrain Juan entirely, bind him with chains and lock him in the underwater prison right now?â Hela asked.
âYour Grace, Iâm justâŠâ
âKnight, you think too little of me and the eastern territory. Do you really think that I have no idea about what Juan is up to? The reason why he suggested joining the punishment unit is to remain in Beldeve.â
âIâm sorry?â Sina asked back in confusion.
âI have detained Juan as a prisoner. If I lock him up in the underwater prison, that would be no different than directly handing him over to the capital. Yet if I release him, you never know what the Imperial Army and the Church might do. Putting him in the punishment unit is the most appropriate alternative. Itâs an excuse to keep Juan within the fourth division and not hand him over to anyone else.â
Sina closed her mouth as she thought Helaâs words were plausible.
âBut why?â
âThen doesnât that just further prove that Juan is pursuing something in the eastern territory?â Sina asked.
âMaybe he is. But about it? Thereâs nothing in the eastern territory that I can give him. I have no idea what Juan wants from the east, but he has no choice but to follow my orders as long as he is in the punishment unit. Iâm gonna make sure to make the most out of him until I get enough value out of him for my risk.â
â...Your Grace.â
Juan was too powerful and dangerous for one to use as a sword held in their hand, but Hela was also a formidable commander. Sina thought that it might be an insult to Hela if she further worried about her, but Hela was dealing with the emperor.
âWho in the world could use the emperor as a sword?â
When Sina opened her mouth to persuade Hela once more, Hela stood up. Perhaps because of her hunched back, Hela was much shorter than Sina. On top of that, she didnât have as much freedom in selecting her weapons, as she only had a single arm. Nevertheless, Hela looked like a huge mountain to Sina. Sina realized yet again that Hela was a veteran who had trained numerous people who held key posts in the Capital Army.
Then, Hela tapped Sinaâs left eyelid with her hand. Sina flinched in surprise; she hadnât even felt the presence of Helaâs hand reaching out to her until that moment. Sina felt chills running down her back when Helaâs dry hand lightly rubbed her eyelid which had burn marks and a tattoo, but she didnât show any agitation.
âIt seems that your wound has no chance of recovery. Is it your arrogance or your fanaticism that allowed you to engrave such letters on your eye?â Hela asked.
â...this too is one of the ruins left by Juan. If I hadnât met Bishop Rietto, who treated me, I would have had to cut off my right hand as well.â
âJuan did that? As expected, heâs such an interesting young fella.â
Hela laughed out loud as if she found the fact that Juan wounded Sina to be funny.
For a second, Sina felt an intense rage upon hearing Helaâs laugh, but soon closed her mouth when she saw Helaâs empty right sleeve fluttering.
Hela grabbed Sinaâs right arm and fiddled with it. Sinaâs right arm was covered with scars, almost as if it was a cloth that had been torn and patched up shabbily; however, the wounds had completely healed up and holding a sword didnât seem to be a problem.
âIt would have been like I was looking into a mirror if you really had lost your right hand, knight. That would have been kind of awkward,â Hela said.
âI sincerely apologize, Your Grace. Iâve been disrespectful, but I never meant to insult you.â
âI see, knight. You called your eye one of the ruins left by Juan, but you donât seem to be ashamed of it. You even engraved those letters on top of it as if you were proud.â
âIâm justâŠâ Sina was speechless.
If Sina truly hadnât wanted to get a tattoo engraved on her eye, she could have just resisted and refused despite whatever the Order of the White Crow said. However, it was also true that there was confusion somewhere deep in her mind. Sina wondered whether or not she should consider the title of âthe emperorâs watchdogâ engraved by Juan himself to be an honor if Juan really was the emperor.
âWhatâs the point if the existence of the emperor itself is a disgrace?â
The tattoo engraved on Sinaâs eyelid symbolized her confusion itself.
âI donât consider my unbalanced figure to be a ruin, knight,â Hela said as she lifted her empty sleeve. âWar took a lot of things away from me: my eye, my arm, my family, and my dreams. Yes, I once thought that all I had left was ruins, just like you. But the ruins also give you something important.â
Sina shrugged her shoulders upon hearing Helaâs whisper. Then, Sina momentarily felt something similar and familiar from Hela.
âWhenever I trip on my foot by accident because my single eye canât properly measure the distance, I think of my dead son who died with an arrow pierced through his eye. When I suffer from phantom limb pain of my arm getting cut off in my sleep, I think of my dead husband who died with his body hung on the pillar. My disabilities gave me a lifelong giftâŠâ
This familiarity was because she could feel madness and hatred. Hela harbored the same feelings that Sina felt from Juan.
ââŠa lifelong gift that helps me to never forget my pain and resentment. Thanks to that gift, I was able to continue this war for fifty years, starting from the age of twenty. I could keep going even when most of my disciples betrayed me, the empire turned a blind eye to me, and the people of the eastern territory complained. Humans are bound to give up when they become exhausted, but these scars help me never forget what I am fighting for.â
Hela too was also the type to ruin everything around her, just like Juan.
â...Your Grace, thatâŠâ
âNo. Youâd better keep that in mind too. Whatever Juan did to your eye, it seems to have had a significant impact on your life.â
Sina remained silent.
âSo donât worry about me, knight. You think that Hela Henna would just be used as a stepping stone and get thrown away? No, instead itâs the other way around. Iâll be the one using him and he will be my stepping stone instead. At the same time, he can use me as much as he wants as well. Donât you want to know how far we can go by stepping on each other?â
Sina got goosebumps on her entire body. She began to question whether it had been a good decision to help Horhell bring Juan to Beldeve. Hela would never quietly hand Juan over to the Order of the Capital. Instead, she will use him as much as she could to achieve her goalâand Helaâs goal wasnât a trivial one.
âIf you donât have anything else to say to me, feel free to leave andâŠâ
At that moment, the door burst open. The only time anyone could burst into the Dukeâs office without knocking was in emergency situations. A soldier with a pale look ran into the office.
âYour Grace, Centurion Horhellâs dragon has crashed on the northern front!â
Helaâs expression stiffened.
***
âAccording to the guardâs report, Horhell is currently somewhere here in the Gelmar Mountain.â
The northern front itself wasnât too far away from Beldeve. In fact, Beldeve was the front line itself.
Juan looked at the bright dots moving around in the dark blue horizon outside the barracks. Fortunately, the search was still underway.
âThe villages of the local rebels around this area are here, here, and here. There are about two thousand people among them who can fight.â
Hela held a candle inside the barracks and pointed out specific locations on the map. The places which Hela pointed out were in a triangular shape as if they were surrounding the Gelmar Mountain, which was reported to be the location where Horhell had crashed.
âItâs right in the middle of the villages,â Juan said.
âThe situation is not very good. I want to rescue Horhell before sunrise if possible, but a night operation is impossible, since we have neither a map of Gelmar mountain nor a local soldier to guide the way. Weâre going to lose a lot of troops to get through those guys to find Horhell, not to mention that we donât even have a lot of troops that can move right away,â Hela said as she looked at Juan. âIâm hoping that the punishment unit will come forward.â
Only a few people were able to come out as soon as they heard the news of Horhellâs crash; except for the minimum number of troops to protect the fortress of Beldeve, only Juan and the punishment unit were present in the barracks.
âArenât you excited that the time for you to perform in an active manner came earlier than expected?â Hela said jokingly.
However, there were less than fifty members in the punishment unit in total. In other words, Hela was giving an order for fifty troops to find Horhell before sunrise while dealing with nearly two thousand enemies. This was literally a suicide mission for the punishment unit.
But unless they acted, Horhell would be captured or killed by the enemies, as there werenât that many places for the dragon to hide its huge body. Although it was unknown as to why the dragon couldnât fly, whether it be because it was in the middle of the night or because it was wounded, it was clear that it was in a situation where it couldnât move.
âItâs not the worst situation,â Juan replied in a calm manner.
âWell, you sound confident.â
âYou see all kinds of things when you live for a long time. In this case, the fact that weâre in the middle of the night is not such a bad thing.â
The guards had a strange look on their faces upon seeing a young man who looked to be only about eighteen years old mentioning âa long timeâ to an old woman who had lived over seventy years. However, Hela didnât seem to mind and simply laughed it off.
âLetâs hope itâs not the worst situation for Horhell either. I think he should be well hidden somewhere, as long as he didnât die from the crash. Heâs the type to get stronger when faced with bad luck, so I believe heâs still alive,â Hela shrugged.
âWere you not prepared for a situation like this?â Juan asked.
âTo be honest, this kind of situation is the first for me as well. Actually, I didnât even know the enemies had the ability to crash a flying dragon. It wouldnât be an exaggeration to say that the reason why we were able to maintain this front line despite our numerical inferiority is all because of Horhellâs dragon.â
Juanâs lips twisted as he realized that Helaâs stiff expression was not only because she was concerned about Horhell being dead or captured.
âIs someone helping the rebels?â Juan asked.
âThat seems very likely, unless the dragon has an upset stomach. The rebels had been very intimidated until now because I had massive damage to them during the early fall battle. I canât think of any other reason for them to pick a fight all of a sudden like this.â
âThe backers of the empireâs rebels, huhâŠâ
There were many candidates, but there were not many opponents who could afford to do so.
âI hope we could find a trace if it was done by the Thornbush Priest Organization. It would be a good opportunity to make a fuss about this in front of the capital. Or, maybe it was the Imperial Army⊠but even if it was them, there arenât many weapons they have that could deal with the dragon⊠perhaps, um⊠no, nevermind,â Hela said as she shook her head.
âDo you have any other ideas?â Juan asked.
â...maybe it was the Templars. Not even a dragon would be able to withstand Spears of Wrath. But there is no reason for the Templars to cooperate with the Thornbush Priest Organization, the enemies of the empire. Donât you think so?â
Juan nodded; he also thought that the Templars should be considered as one of the options. It was obvious that the Order of the Evil Snake were still after Juan, hence it wouldnât be a big surprise that the Templars ran into Horhell by a so-called-coincidence and shot down his dragon, since Horhell was the one who took Juan away the last time.
âI think we should consider it a possibility and keep that in mind,â Juan said.
Search tinyurl.com/2p9emv8w for the original.
âWhat? The Templars? I donât even want to think about the situation where I have to deal with two thousand rebels and the Templars at the same time,â Hela looked at Juan with a startled look on her face.
âI agree, but just because you don't want to think about it doesnât mean that it wonât happen.â
Juan went out of the barracks, while Hela followed him outside the barracks.
âDo you think youâll be able to bring him back?â