Cheney was exhausted. The government had asserted that the Afghanistan war was perfect, but it wasnât from the perspective of Cheney, who had actually participated in it. Mercenaries like him were responsible for maintaining public order in occupied territories. Terrorists often sent kids with bombing vests, and they were forced to make painful decisions.
If he wasnât desperate for money, he would have gone back to his hometown already. However, he had a son suffering from childhood cancer there.
One day, a Whitehorse executive came with a contract extension document.
âNext one is in Iraq. The superiors are urging us to extend the detachment contract, so the next destination must be Iraq as well,â the executive said.
âAre the conditions the same?â Cheney asked.
âYes, but Iâm thinking of giving you a better offer since your reputation is quite good.â
The executive placed new files on the table, and Cheney skimmed through the names of the dispatch areas and employers. This contract wasnât for a battlefield. It was his hometown, Texas, and the employer organization was far from the war industry. On top of that, they had offered a thirty percent increase in his original annual salary. Cheney couldnât understand.
âWhat do they do, and where am I going to be assigned?â he finally asked.
The executive replied blithely, âLetâs say that itâs a hazardous substance disposal station. Well, thatâs kind of true. Anyway, youâll hear the truth after you sign the contract.â
Cheney thought it would be less dangerous than the warzone. He would no longer need to aim a gun at a kidâs forehead and could see his wife and son on regular vacations.
He picked up a pen.
***
âIt looks like an air-raid shelter.â
The hazardous substance disposal station was camouflage for the place. There was a station, and a real business was running, but the actual thing was located underground.
âThatâs right. I heard it was built during the Cold War,â Ethema replied, and he was an agent assigned as Cheneyâs supervisor. Cheney knew him well as he was famous for his excellent performance when he was a trainee in Whitewater and won a favorable contract. Besides Ethema, Cheney saw many familiar faces of the outstanding trainees here.
âYou are from Afghanistan, right?â Ethema questioned.
âYes,â Cheney responded.
âYouâve come a long way. Your training record seemed decent, so if you had joined earlier, you would have been in level two by now. Thatâs too bad.â
âI havenât heard anything except that Iâm in level three.â
âNo need to rush. Follow me.â
This place, which was built by mending an air-raid shelter, seemed to have strong security in Cheneyâs view. There was only one entrance, and they had installed a reinforcement blocking gate at every passageway down to the warehouse. Of course, agents and high-performance surveillance cameras were everywhere. In order for someone to break into the warehouse, they had to go through a strict security system in this entire station.
What are they keeping? Is it a drugâŠ
âYou are perhaps thinking that weâre protecting drugs, right?â Ethema asked.
Cheney widened his eyes in surprise.
âNo.â
His supervisor continued, âEveryone thinks like that at first, and so did I. I used to wonder how many drugs were piled up here under this degree of security.
The passage down to the basement was long and narrow. Cheney was bothered by the surveillance cameras that moved in response to motion detection sensors. It was obvious that every single movement was being watched.
âYouâll be placed outside. This will be your first and last time entering the warehouse unless your position changes. Make sure you look at what weâre protecting. If a problem arises, itâs our job to retrieve them,â Ethema said.
The more Ethema explained, the more curious Cheney became.
What is it?
They passed the last security system of the reinforcement blocking gate. In front of them was a gigantic bank vault door that blocked their view. Cheney sent a signal to the agent at the gate, and the agent picked up the phone.
âCat Food Warehouse. Code number 005.â
The vault door finally opened, and Cheney stared at the gap. What he saw was different from what he expected. There werenât tons of drugs piled up, nor gold bars, nor jewels.
Cheney followed Ethema into the warehouse and saw various-sized cabinets arranged in an orderly fashion. Each cabinet had a tempered glass window that allowed a person to check the contents from the outside, and a name tag was attached to them. When Cheney looked at Ethema, Ethema nodded. Cheney was now free, so he approached the nearest cabinet. Then, Ethema warned him from the back, âDonât touch anything. As soon as you touch it, youâll get killed and people will think that you had died in Afghanistan. Hahaha. Why are you so surprised?â
Ethema laughed it off, but his words seemed to be true. The guns of the agents outside the blocking gate were shining. Cheney gulped and looked over the tempered glass.
Leather gloves? Theyâre just leather glovesâŠ
Cheneyâs gaze shifted to the name tag.
ăClassification Number: F-0001
Name: Hunting Glovesă
Following that, Cheney scrambled while skimming through the tempered glasses of the cabinets. The contents varied. While some of them looked modern, such as glasses, shirts and pants, there were also breastplates and weapons that seemed to be used in the Middle Ages.
ăClassification Number: E-0112
Name: Kciphos Intensifierâs Iron Maceă
Some of them were presumed to be from primitive civilizations.
ăClassification Number: C-0051
Name: High-Ranked Plague Sorcererâs Bone Necklaceă
Cheney moved to the end of the air-raid shelter as if he was possessed by something. Then, he turned his head in all directions. The cabinets were piled up because a single file wasnât enough to store all the contents. All he could see were cabinets.
Cheney and Ethema came out on the ground. When Ethema sat on the bench and tapped the spot next to him, Cheney hurriedly sat down, looking dazed.
Ethema laughed.
âThey are cat food, and this place is a cat food warehouse. Thatâs the official code name.â
âAre they mysterious?â Cheney asked with a serious face.
âMysterious?â
âYou know, something like ancient relics with supernatural powers. Itâs not believable, but thereâs no other way to explain it.â
Cheney recalled the security of the cat food storage.
âMaybe or maybe not. You will know when the security strengthens. Newbies start from there,â Ethema pointed far ahead.
They couldnât see from their spot, but warning signs with radioactivity marks were attached to the steel-barred fence. From there, guard posts were located at every certain distance, and Ethema was pointing to one of them.
âYou must have fought against terrorists on battlefields, but you will fight the boredom from now on. I guarantee that youâll never find any job like this. Any questions?â Ethema asked.
ââŠAre there any groups after us?â
âNot for now, but itâs obvious that the cat food should never be exposed to the world. I hope you donât come up with your own ideas because these things are useless to us. Thatâs all I can tell you.â
Ethema turned his gaze toward the outskirts, and Cheney turned his head in the same direction. A vehicle was entering.
âNew cat foods are here,â Ethema muttered.
ââŠWhere are they coming from?â
Ethema had been nice like the Virgin Mary, but his kindness vanished immediately. Cheney shut his mouth as he realized it was time to get up with his equipment without saying a word. Then, he headed toward the guard post that Ethema pointed at while looking at the car that entered. Agents from the storage were helping the driver take iron chests out from the trunk under tight security.
***
âThank you.â
âThank you.â
Woo Yeon-Hee and I handed over drop items and backpacks to the agents. Since drop items from C-class dungeons were of high quality, we had brought as many as we could. The Kciphos Corps Leaderâs Mana Stone I got after defeating the boss monster had to be stored, too. I handed that over to the agents and headed towards the shower tent.
The water from the hose was warm since it was a simple shower booth, but it was perfect to remove blood stains from my body. These items were outdated, so I put the cape into my backpack and came out of the tent.
After a while, Woo Yeon-Hee also came out, drying her hair with a towel. She faintly smiled while looking at me as she was celebrating how we had not used Maryâs Hand and the Man Who Overcomes Adversity. However, fatigue covered her face as the conquest was fierce. She stumbled, so I wrapped my arms around her shoulder.
âYou are tired, too,â she said.
She had no idea that we were abnormally powerful and enterprising compared to other Awakened in the past.
âToday is the 17th,â I said.
Woo Yeon-Hee looked at me with curiosity, then she widened her eyes as if she realized something.
âHow did it go?â she asked.
âWhat do you think?â
She instantly looked at the agents. Everyone here knew that we were Koreans because of the language we spoke. We approached the agent who was organizing the drop items into the iron cabinets.
She asked, âHow did it go?â
âPardon me?â the agent questioned.
âDid Korea make it to the round of sixteen?â
The agentâs eyes quivered, and I murmured to myself that heâs an American and not too interested in the World Cup. Apparently, there was another agent who was into soccer, so the agent pointed at him.
âThey did.â
Woo Yeon-Hee clenched her fists after hearing that as if she had received a nice reward from the box. Then, she frowned as the pain kicked in. She was no longer the hunter who fought against the Kciphos Corps Leader with murderous eyes. She was now just a red devil who missed the soccer games since she last watched the match against Poland on June 4th.
âKorea was the best,â the agent said.
She let out a sad sigh, then looked up at me with twinkling eyes.
âIsnât it too late to go back to Korea? To watch the round of sixteenâŠâ She made a sad face.
âWeâll be able to join the local Korean team to return if we head to New York right now. But will you be able to do that with your current health?â I asked.
Woo Yeon-Hee nodded strongly and replied in excitement, âI might cry if I miss that game. Itâs the round of sixteen!â